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•

j

Hospital News
Soyuz

23

\'F.URANS MEMORIAL
Sat urday Admis's ion:s
A.l\'a Rl't'd , PoiJleroy ; Le"is

missiOn . by

&lt;"osm onau ts

Zudov
and
Val er i
llozhdestv ens ky aborted
after a similar failure to hnk
lip with t~ Sa lyut 5 space
mtion.
The Soyuz 23 mission returned safe lv to ea r th afte r

8

Right of oniy 48 hours from
launC'h to tourt1do"11.
The only other manned
spaceflight car ried out by the
Soviets in 19n was on Feb. 7.
Cosmonauts Viktor Gorbatko
and Yuri Glazkov were
launched abcard Sol11Z 24 for
an la..day ·space mission to
the Salyut 5 sta tion.

To high school parents, teachers
Regardless or your sentiments concerning parent-teac~r
groups, PAT welcomes &gt;·ou to our first meeting Tuesday,
October 11 , at 7: 30 at Meigs High School.
U we SOWld d~fens ire , it'S only because we realize that
some teachers and some parents ,Jlave had negative
experiences in th e past with parent-teacher groups, and are
therefore reluctant to gi1•e up one more night a month for a
questionable cause.
·
Won't you be fair and gi1·e PAT a chance?
PAT was organized to serve as a "booster" group for
M.H.S.: we hope to "spread t~ word'' about positive things
going on at the school. PAT intends to be another channel of
communi cation between parent and teacher, hQme and school,
school and community. PAT wants to inforin the public abcut

The latest mission lifted off
fr om '
the
Baikonu r
Cosm odrom e
in
SO\•ie t

Mart in. Shade.
Satu rday Disc harges Helen Gibbs. O'Dell Blake.
Cletu s Arnell. Margare.t
Pareell. Richard Duck·
worth)', Janet Sigman.
Velma Winebrenner, Martha
Mu stain , W. H. Perrin ,
Gladys Morgan, Mildred ·
Workman. David Gloeckner.
Sunday Admissions Thomas Weston, Minersville;
Doris Adams, Racine ;
Brenda Hayes, Galloway ;
DebQra Wander, Shade.
Sunday Discharges Mary Hackney, John Hansun .

.

l

'

..

,.\)

..

Area Deaths

!

been Wldergoing cosmonaut

training since 1967.
·Flight engineer Ryumin is
a ~year~ld , design bur·eau
engineer who had worked oo
developing and testing new
space equipment before ~
began cosmonaut training in
1973.

LEGAL NOTICE

,,.

'

~

Queen nmned
! .Saturday night

mi 5Sto n o f Ohi o has set far
public hea o ng Case N o

77·37S ·EL ·FAC to rev•ew
the fuel procu rement pract ices and po li c ies of the
Colum bus and Southern
Oh io Electr ic' Company ,
the operati o n of its fuel
cost adjustment clause ,
and related mat ters . This
hearing is scheduled to be gm at 10 :0.0 A .M., on

Auction has

off ices of the Commi SSIOn ,
180 East Broad Street ,
Colum bu s, Ohi o . A ll int er-

ested person.s w ill be gi ven
an opportUn i ty t o be
hea rd . Funher m fo rm at lon m ay be ob t ained by
contac tin g
the
Public
Ut1l 1t ies Com mi ssion .

Layoffs made
at Interlock

THE PUBliC UTI LITIE S
COMMISSIO N OF OHIO

by Randall G. Applegate,
·

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC ST.

Why shouldlit
a GIRL be a

DRIVING
1\lfiS.z rtrM PIBCB

Newspaper
carrief.?

S

Women's l•b rs here to sla'y. G1rl s
.. are very capable of handli ng a
newspaper del1very route and
more and more grrls around the
country are takmg on a carrier

J.Ob. 11'5 a good way to meet new
people. learn good busrnes s
DraCtices a11d earn a lrttle extra

Farnters Bank
POMEROY, OHIO
$40,000 Maxifl)um Insurance For. Each Depositor
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Pilgrims

Eighty units of
blood received .

'

Eighty units of blood were
received at the Bloodmobile
visit Mooday w Pomeroy
Elementary School.

mone y. Joo learning how to be a
good earner can g1ve you in -

sights that can help you through ·
out your li fe The Sentinel
\\'elcomes fem ale carrrets. Jo•n
you r lnE'ndo; tr&gt;day 1

THE
·

DAILY
SENTINEL

Come early for
best selection.

SIZE 9'Xl2'

'59.00
SI~E

12'Xl2'

'79JJo
SIZE 12'Xl5'

'89.00
.

-

-

SIZE 12'Xl8'

'109.00
SIZE 12'X21'

'129.00

~r~&lt;1itage.

ELBERFELD$· IN POMEROY

,_

There were 85 persons
I .

attending and 64 of the 60
·wtitB were replacements.
First time donors were
Pamela Vaughan, Jack
Sakyonne,' Marie Probert.

Cheryl Abbott, Carol Erwm, gaUon, Robert Vaughan; 12
Wtlliam Middleswarth, ·ga llon ; Walter Couch .
Ernest
Haggy,
Roger . Nurses were Mrs .. Vern
Manley; one gallon donors, Story and , Lenora Letfheit.
Freda Durham, Isabelle · Doctors were Dr. L. D. Telle,
Couch, Leo Loring Vaughan, Dr. E. S. Villaneuva and Dr.
Jr ., Kathy Cummins: two Raymond Boice.
ga llon, Patty Barten ; three
In charge of the canteen
gallon, Ellis Myers; five was the Cbild Conservation
ga llon, Mace! Barton; eight Lea oue. Clerical workers

·:~,,~:;._~'*::::.:..~::..,~:~::*::::::::::~:•.:~~:~:~:!~~!!:::::::.~:.~:...'!:::::::~::~-::::::~:::::::.~::.~:»."~ ~:~~e. ~~~~t:~~~~~ ~~:~

• B •. t. s~,··~ .
.~JVt
~,.~:'· ews. • .zn · rze
"

e

~

By United Pr.esslnternatlonal
WASIDNGTON -CONGRESS FOR THE FIRST time is
moving..to outlaw pocnography featuring children and to crack
down on the use of young beys as prostitutes. The Senate
approved legislation Monday to prohibit the production, sale
and distribution of so.ealled kidporn . It also forbids coercing or
enticing young boys across stale lines IIH' prostiMion.
The1inal vote was 85-1, with Sen. James Abourfzk, D-S.D.,
casting t~ only negative vote. The House has passed almost
identical legiSlation in the form of amendments to child abuse
laws. But the House also plans nell,! week to act on anot~r
· measure whi.ch would not cover distribution aryd sale of child
pornograph.
Despite · warnings the Supreme Court would rule
unconstitutional the part of the bill dealing with distribution
and sales, the Senate by a 73-12 vote approved an amendment
widening t~ scope of the bill.

Sayre, Martha Lou Beegle,
Mace! Barton, Grace Drake,
J oyce
Hoback,
Kathy
Cununings, Pat Engles, Alice
Wolfe, Erna Jesse, Theresa
·Starr, Lula Hampton and
Vernon Nease.
Donations were made by
~ality Print Shop, Meigs
Local School, Daily Sentinel,
Athens Messenger, WMPO
Radio, Pomeroy ER Squad
and Vete rans Memorial
Hospital.
Retired senior volunteer
citizens U1at assisted were ·
Paul Smart, Clarence

Explorer Posi
meeting set
this evening

.I

I

•-

a1

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday through
Saturday, fair Thursday
and Friday with a ebance
of showers Saturday. Highs
to the 50s Thursday,
warming to near 60 by
Saturday. Lows Ill tbe 30s.
·.;: ;:; :;:::;:;:;::=::;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;: ;:;:;: ; : ;:;:;:;:; :;i : : :::~::::::: ::: :: :: :· .

Weather
Cooler tonight and Wed·
nesday. Lows tonight near 40.
Highs Wednesday to mid 50s . .
Chance of rain 60 per cent
today; 70 per cent tonight arid
Wednesday.

Servi~e

'

Senate leaders COnfer
with President Carter
Zumwalt
said
Soviet
presence would be more
likely to flourish if the
pendin~ treaties are rejected.
Moorer, former chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of St:aff,
said Monday his prediction of
Russian advances was based
on observations over. a 4{).
year naval career.
During that time, he said,
Russia moved into Libya and
took control of Wheelus Air
Force Base, gained control of
bases in Angola and Mozambique and established "an
axis" with Cuba.
(Continued on page 12)

•

enttne

Fifteen Cents
Vol,. 28, No. 125

Hon!kJ assembly plant
going to Union County
COLUMBUS (UP])
In the spring of 1979.
Honwi Motor Co. Ltd. today Kawashima said construction
announced selection of a ·217· would begin "as soon after ,
· acre site in Union County for the first of the year as
construction of a $25 million possible."
motorcycle assembly plant · The announcement · was
starting in 1978.
made in the governor's
The plant will employ up to · Cabinet Room minutes after
500 persons initially.
majority ~ocrats on the
K. Kawashima, executive state Controlling Board had
ERNEST C. NICHOLSON
vice president of the voted to release $2.5 miUlon
Japanese cofporation, and in state emergency funds to
Gov. James A. Rhodes the Department of Economic
announced the site selectioo a n d · C o m m u n i t y
jointly and said Honda may Development for t~ Honda
follow in several years with project.
an automobile manufactur·
Kawashima said the initial
ing plant. ·
phase would be a jpint
The motorcycle factory, venture of Honda Motor Co.
. occupying . 220,000 square and its American subsidiary,
Village Council, and council feet, is to produce
and would be the company's
president at the time of his motorcycles a ye_a r starting first manufacturing plant in
death, Mrs. Nicholson was a
past commander of Eli
Denison Post 467, American
Legion, Rutland; a member
of the county Veterans AI·
fairs Board ; a former
member of the Veterans of
Foreign Wars; a leader in the
Boy Scouts of America.
He was a member of the
Rutland Church of Christ.
Americans was Sir Nevill F.
By
MORTENSEN
Mr. Nicholson for his time
Molt,
72, of Cambridge
STOCKHOLM, Sweden
in the anned forces received ( UPI) -Two Americans and University, England.
the Africa and Middle a Briton won the 1977 Nobel .
"The three prize winners
Eastern Service Medals with physics prize today for solid are theoreticians within the
two bronze stars and the state research work that field of solid state physics World War II Victory Medal. could make solar heating the branch of physics which
Officiating at ThurSday's systems cheaper in the lies behind essential parts of
services will be the Rev . C. J . . future.
the
current
technical
Lemley. Burial will he in
The Americans honored by development, particularly in
Miles . Cemetery. Friends the Swedish Royal Academy electronics," the Academy
may call at the funeral home of Sciences are Dr. Philip W. said.
Academy member Prof.
from 10 a.m. Wednesday until Anderson, M, of the Bell
time of services on thursday. Telephone Labcratories in Stlg Lundqvist said Mott and
The family wilf receive Mw-ray Hill, N.J., and Prof. Anderson's knowledge of the
friends at the funeral home John H. van Vleck, . 78; of behavior of · crystalllc
meant,
for
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Ha"rv·ard
University, materials
practical
application,
that
Wednesday. Military rites Cambridge, Mass.
\vill be conducted at the
Sharing th~ three-way "solar heating cells may
cemetery by Eli Denison . award - and the $145,000 become cheaper in the future,
It now takes about seven or
Post, American Legion.
prize money - with the

set for ·
Ernes-t Nicholson

RUTLAND - Funeral
services for· Ernest C.
(Dutch) Ni'chol~on, 62,
Rutland Village Council
president who died · unex·
pectedly Monday morning at
the home of a son, Michael,
have been set for 2 p.m .
Thursday at the Walke.t,
Funeral Home.
Mr. Nicholson, a resident of
Salem St., Rutland, was
pronwnced dead upon the
arrival of . the Rutland
SE.OEMS unit at the home of
his son on College St.
Mr. Nicholson was born
Apri125, 1915 in DexteJ, a ·son
of the late M. A. and Clair
Sansbury Nicholson . He
married the former Ethel
Jacks on Feb. 19, 1946 at
London, Ohio. He retired live
years ago from his duties
with the maintenance depart·
men! of the Foote Mine~al­
Corp. He served in the U. S.
Army during World War II
\Vhen he was a prisoner of the
Germans.
·
Surviving besides his wife
are two SOI!.s,~Michael "Carl
and William Roger, both of
Rutland;
two
grand·
daughters, Miranda and
Bridget Dawn, both of
Rutland; a grandson, Ryan
Michael, Rutland; three
brothers, Waid, Dexter ;
Dale, Middleport, and Marion
of Marion; a sister, Mrs.
George (Evelyn) Burkey,
Vermillion , s.everal nieces, .
nephews and cousins.·
A member of Rutland

BAR HARBOR, MAINE - DEWEY REINHARD and CO·
pilot Steve Stephenson drifted slowly across the chilly North
Atlantic today in their giant silver and black balloon "Eagle,"
bcping to be the first ever to make t~ 3,000,mile trip to
Europe.
' After waiting several hOW'S for ~aVy winds to SUbSide, the
Sheriff' James J . Proffitt
two Colorado Springs, Colo., adventurers cast off. from the announced today that an
Maine coast at 5:35 p.m. EDT Monday and headed out to sea. organizational meeting of
Reinhard, 47, and Stephenson, 44, kissed, their families Meigs County Explorer Post
goodbye and waved to a crowd of townspeople before climbing 230, sponsored by the
aboard the yellow, orange and red gondola attached to the base Sheriff's Department, will be
of the 85-loo(-\ligh balloon, .
held this evening at 8 p. m. at
A technical adviser said the two took advantage of a · the sheriff's offi&lt;:e for young
momentary "weather window" between high and low pressure adults, boy~ and girls, age 14
systems.
through 20.
It is to provide a program,
tbrougb, scouting, with oC·
cupational specialty of law
enforcement.
Sheriff Proffitt
'
is
the
institutional
representative;
Milford
Hysell is post advisur and
Several special guests Darrell Slone is assistant post
Over $1,200 profit from an
auction last Saturday con- presented checks to help the advisor.
Committee members are
ducted under sponsorship of organization in its effort to
judge
Robert E. Buck, Larry
the Meigs Countlans for Wild· defeat Issue Two . Tom
Spencer,
clerk of courts; Ron
life Conservation Association Grueser and John Grueser
Hollon
and
Bob Beegle.
put 'the local group' over the represented the Meigs
top in its drive to raise funds County Fish and Game
Association, Jack Westfall
to fight Issue 2.
That was -announced presented a checli on behalf
Monday evening at a meeting of the Western Boots C. B. ·
of the association at ·the local' Club, Rob Bjrchlield gave the f
lairgrounds. The sum ratsed donation of the Rutland G,un
more than met the amount Club and the Rutland i','.
.
assigned to the local group by Volunteer Fire Department,
KeMelh
Knotts
and
Jess
the Ohioans for Wildlife
Conservation to raise money Freeman represented the ~
t·.·.· ·.•J
for a TV carnpaigu in op- Raccoon Valley S]l&lt;irtsman's
-Club, Bill Grueser presented
position to fssue 2.
,
Auction chairman Gene a check from the Big Bend
Young and treasurer RiChard Bass Ariglers, and Larry Well
Coleman, extended their presented checks from the
thimks to all who donated in · Ken Amsba ry Chapter, Izaak
Walton League ol America,
any way.
Thanks was also given to and the Bricklayers and
Young for the use of his Allied Craftsmen.
Anyone wishing to con·
property during the auction.
The Coonhunters' Association tribute to this organization is
.got a hearty round of ap- urged to call Coleman at 985plause for the ·use of its 3376, Karr at 992-2219, or
building on the fairgrounds. Young at 3711-6376.
DONATIONS MADE - Local clubs and organizations
Personal contributions
A financial report was
presented donations Monday night to the Meigs Cou ntians
given by Coleman, and Ray were made last night by
for Wildlife Conservation. Representing their respective
· Karr kept everyone up to date Rufus Cline, Norman Weber,
organizations and presentlng checks were, front, (1-r),
on recent political action and Bill Connelly, !lob Vance , and
Tom Grueser, V.P., Mei~s County Fish and Game; Jack
what is being planned as Larry Well .
Westfall, Western Bqots C.B. Club ; Rob Bil¢hfield,
vot.llg time nears.

$1,200 raised to
oppose Issue 2

First
quality
millend
carpeting in nylon and
acrylon. Bound all around,
·solid colors, patterns, some
shag, some plush.

slope to the site, repeated the
story.
A
13-year-old
boy
reportedly paral)"led by jl(llio
"threw down his crutches and
walked" after being ~ld up
to the statue, witnesses said.
"And I also saw a halo of
light around the statue about
1 ·a.m.,n a seamstress said.
"And. the fingers moved. His
eyes blinked several limes."
About f5,000 persons
crowded into St. Peter's
Basilica, the world's largest
church, for the canonization.
Among them were abcut
12,000 Maronite Christians
from Lebanon . ·
Makhlouf, a monk of the
Maronite order, was born in
1828at Bega' Kafra and spent
the last 23 years of his life as
a hermit. He died on
Christmas Eve, 1898, at the
lige of 70.
While alive , Charbel was
said !0 have :performed a
humber
of .. · miracles,
including turning water into
kerosene and successfully
ordering a poisonous snake to
sli ther away from the ·

But most of the miracles
attributed to him came after
-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.ll ~----------.,1 his deH t11 ·
.

MILL ENDS
ROOM SIZE RUGS

(Continued from page I)

and Wishing You Weren't
top driving. and start looking! When you're in the
market for a new or · later model car ... see us.
c·Our Auto Loans are geared to help you buy that car
you want now ... when you want it ... and let you
repa_1· with a plan that'~ geared to vour budget! Ju st
select the rar yo11 want and tell11 o tlw amo11nl you'll
' need to purcha se it. On approval ... in many ca ses
it's the same day . .. you'll have the money to drive
home in yo ur new set of wheels! Get all the facts soon!

Special Purchase and Safef

'

::: : ;::: :: : :::::;:;:;:;: ; :;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.: ;:; :~ : =::::;:;:;:::;:; :;:;::

~ransfers

go to .58 counties ·

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
· Tue$day. October II. 1977

_Meigs
Property

October 31 , 1977 , at the

The meeting t•ame as the

m~ft: ------------------------~---

Plane crashes in com field

The Pu bli c U til it 1es Cfl m ·

'.

problem," he said he told
·
·
Senate Foreign Relations Carter. " We should do
Coolmittee and the House anything we can, in kn
International Relations economic way, to ~lp them
Coolmittee held hearings on (Panama)- but not to wind
whether to give t~ canal to up giving them the canal."
"The American people are
Panama in the yeir 2000.
Strong controversy has been not going to buy giving that candid discussion he has
raised over w~ther Panama canal away ," Goldwater attended at the Carter White
would allow U.S. Intervention said . "Don't ask me why. It's House .
away."
in a subsequent canal like the American flag . · Senate Democratic Leader
They're wrapped up in it." Robert Byrd said he felt the
" Before I will accept t~ emergency.
"I don't think anbody . tr~ty has gained in public
Goldwater told reporters it
treaty .. . it will have to have
changed
his position," added support. But,"! doo 't knDw,"
sume rather large changes," was an apparent attempt by
Senate
GOP
Le;ider Howard he sa.id, when asked if it has
the Ari2ona Republican told, Carter to clarify the treaties.
Baker,
who
has
not taken a picked up support in the
reporters after he and other but the explanation did not
position
oo
the
issue.
But he Senate.
senators were summoned by change his opinion.
called
it
the
most
frank
and
Carter to talk over the issue.
"It is an economic
. On Monday, Adrn. Thomas·
Moorer appeared before the
Foreign Relations Committee
and
raised the specter of
CHAMPION CORPS - Winning first place in overall competiti~n .as the most
strong
Russian influence over
outstanding rifle corps of all 32 bands taking part in the. third annual Athens Invitational
the
canal
if the treaties are
Marching Band Festival at Peden Stadium Saturday was the ·Meigs High School marching
approved.
band rifle corps. Pictured from the left with their trophy are corps members Stephanie
But retired Adm. Elmo
Radford, Rufh Ann Blake, Carin Bailey, and Rita Bailey.
By NICHOLAS DAND..OFF
WASHINGTON (UPI ) President Carter discussed
the Panama Canal treaties
with Senate leaders today
and a dubious Barry
Goldwater said later it's like
the American flag
Americans "are not going to
b6}1" giving that canal

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Oct. l)
Donald Angel. Frank
Baumgard, Charles Cheesebrew, Re·becca Conger, Myla
Conner, Peggy Dawson,
James Duffy, Dwaine Fain,
HOWARD BEASLEY AND HIS STAFF empty a box
of misceUaneous items on a table with the whole pile of
the various departments and activities of the school, Clyde Floyd, Mrs. AnthonY
whatever
it
turns
out
to
be
going
to
the
highest
bidder.
presenting such information through a program at each Griffin and daughter, Fern
monthly meeting.
Hayman. E.dna Henry, Brian , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.- - - - - - - - - 1
F or example, the Octo.b er meeting will feature Guidailce Hodges, Zella Howell, Robert
Department personnel wbo will briefly discuss their duties and Huddleston. Jay Jagers, Mrs.
then answer questions about registration! testing; counseling, Michael Johnson and son,
1Continued from PIC' I) .
or other matters within their department. Tentatively plaMed Ralph Johnston; Jackie
.
'
I
everybody joins in the pace ·
-.
future programs include a discussion of attendance policies, KerwQOd, Donald Marcum,
WAlTER SCOTT
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - and the bags sell like hot
N~llie Rae Stephenson
school, rules, and the student handbook ; presentations by Mrs. Michael Markins and
Wa lter Scott, 66. a res ident Nancy Lyn Patton or
Mrs .
Nellie
Rae·
variouS academic and vocational departments of the school; daughter, Mahalia Pervatt, Stephenson, Manan , W. Va ., of 50 VInton Ave .. Gall ipol is, Columbus, Ind., was selected cakes.
The real hlghllght comes ..,
and an ppen house during National Education Week.
Ronald Phalin, Cla ra Pullins, 52 , died Saturday In Mont- died unexpectedly at his Miss Columbus USA 19n in when one of tbe purchasers
General Hospital
home around 9 a .m. Sunday · teremonies Saturday night.
Scoffers say no one will come ; tlle cynics say PAT will die Dorothy Rayburn, Norma qomeroy
He was born Aug . 4, 1911 , 1n
A native of Winifrede, W.
finds his sack has a lucky
out. Maybe so .. lf such a group is neither needed nor desirable, Ridgway, Shirley Thacker, Va ., Mrs . Stephenson spent Gallipqlis, son of the late
Miss Patton, 20, chosen number or an item that was
it should "die out.' ' But to prejudge PAT's fate, or toopresume James Tucker, Edith Veaian. the past 31 Jears in Mahan . Charles and Maggie Smedley from among 14 cootestants
She attende the Church of Scott.
from communities in the not in any other sack. This
its motives is patently unfair.
(Births, Oct. 7
luc~y guy or gal may win a
the
Naza
rene
at
Burnwell.
He
never
married
.
t'
d c 1 bu
Teachers, don 't wait until you need to meet a parent;
Mr. and Mrs. Allan Pugh, a
Mr. Scott was a ret ired na ton na,me - o urn s, was
Surviv ing are ller huSband,
valuable
prize or perhaps, a
parents, don't wait until you have to go to the school. Let 's daughter, Pomeroy.
Rothe! ; thr-ee brothers, C. J . employee of Ohio Produce crowned by Antoi!i_ette Borde
choice
selection
from several
meet at PAT. - Dorothy Oliver, M.H.S. teacher, M.H.S..
Cottre ll, Winifrede ; Bill Co. and the Cl ty of Gall ipolls. of New Mexico, last year's
(Discharges, Oct. 8)
items
offered
as
grab bag
He Is survived by two Miss Columbus USA.
parent,' and PAT secretary.
Jlll Barber, James Barlow, Cottrell, Chesapeake, W. Va .,
I
and Jack CottrelL Marmet, brothers ,
prizes.
.
Harry
Scott
,
Rllnnersup
wete:
Terri
Louis Blevins, Mrs. Gary · w. V.a ., and five sisters, Mrs. lrontoo and Raymond Scott L
H d 1 M tan
All in all, it seems that
• _YM
ear o
on a,
Canterbury and son, Mrs. Gwinnie Wh ite, Middleport ; Gallipolis .
everyone
has a great time
;-:=our sisters and brothers ftrst ; Pamela S. Dartt of
William Dailey and daughter, Mrs. Jessie Cooper , Winifred ,
and
the
crowd
keejllt coming
foW1er
l
y
of
Langsvi
lle
;
Mrs.
preceded
him
In
death.
Wisconsin
second·
MANSFIELD, Ohio (UP]) Cleveland to Dayton . He said James Fraley, Amy Golds·
Pal
Rumbaugn
,
and
Mrs.
Joe
back
like
a
song,
Friday alter
Three
n
l
~ces
and
one
Constance
M;ans
of
North
Four Cleve land~area he tried to make an bury , Bernard Harris,
Mullins , Win ifrede , and Mrs , nephew survtve.
Ca
th'
d
d La
.
Friday
.
1
residents escaped serious emergency landing but Imogene Henry , Gladys Kitty Ball , Chesapeake, W.
Mr. Scott was a member of
. ro ma,
Lr i an
ura
injury Saturday night when crashed four miles north of McKean, Read Shephard, Va.
Paint Creek Baplist Church R1ce of Nebraska, fow-th.
wc,s preceded in death and served as a member of
their light plane crashed in a Lahm.
Emma Shirley, Helen Strong, byShe
two sisters, one in in fancy , the church ' s board of
corn field north ·or Lahm
Ken Cornell of Maple James Wolford, Belinda and Mrs. Madge Cooper, and deacons. He was also a
QUAKE SENSED
Airport.
Heights was treated for fa cial Wood.
three brothers, Guy CottrelL member of the ushering
BERKELEY, Calif. (UPI )
Pilot, Charles Eloshway of lacerations and ~wo othe~
Rome · c ottrel l, and Finley committee .
I Births, Oct. 8)
The University of
Cottrell.
.and her parents,
:-=uneral serviceS will be
Warrensville Heights said the passengers, Patricia. and'
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Byerly, Colohef Jerome
California
Seismographic
Cottrell and held 2,p.m. Wednesday at !he
Cessna 172 developed engine Connie McCabe of Maplj! a daughter, Ra,y, Ohio; Mr. M.aude Fink Cottrell.
LabQratory said today a
Paint Creek Baptist Church
trouble while traveling from Heights,·were unhurt.
and Mrs. Samuel Loganacre,
Funeral services w!ll be wHh Rev . Grover Tu rner
"rilajor earthquake'' w8s
a daughter, New Haven, W. held at 1 p.m . Tuesday at the officiating. Buria l will follow registered at 8'06 a. m. EDT
Pryor Funeral Home in East- in Pine Street Cemetery .
Va.
bank, W. Va., with bur ia l in
1-rlends may cal l at M cCoy in the region of the Tonga
Payme~ts
(Discharges, Oct. 9)
Islands in the South Pacific.
the l ondon Cemetery .
. W,etherholt ~ Moore Funeral
FrNnces Briggs, Am y
Home in G.:,ltipolis from 1 The quake measured 7 on the
Diane Young to Buckeye
until 9 p. m . on Tuesday .
Richter scale.
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The felonies .
Rural Electric Coop, Inc.,
He
said Canter, Amy Elkins, Mrs.
1he bOdy will 11e tn stare ar
state auditor's office has sent reimbw-sementfor such costs Louis Green and son, Virginia
the church one hour pr ior to
Right of Way , Meigs.
DON'T LOOK
more than $8(1, 750 in Crinlinal is made by the state after Grinstead , Leon Hutchison,
services.
Pearl Deem, Dec., SybU
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
Cost Subsidy Program pay. counties submit bills to the Lowell Jeffers, Margaret
ERNEST NICHOLSON
Astronomer Warren H. Am· Ebershach, Comm. to ~ybal
ments to 511 counties.
Ohio Public
Defender Malone, Mrs. Todd Mlller and
RUTLAND
Ernest
quest warns that the public Deem, Thelma Montgomery,
son, Bryan Molihan, Mrs.
Auditor
Thomas
E . Commission.
(Dutch) Nicholson, 62, Sa lem should not watch the eclipse Sharlene Gray, Jimmy
Ferguson said the payments
Sf ., Rutland , died unex The payments ranged from Francis Queen and son, Fay
of the sun by · the liiQOII Deem, Roger D. Deem,
pectedly Monday morning at
were the result of successful · $71.55 for Medina &lt;lounty to Slone, Blanche Stevers,
home of a son, Mike
Wednesday because it can Robert Deem, Pearl Deem,
Tracy WiUs, Angela Wright.
prosecuti o n
and more than li8,651 for
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI ) - · the
Nicholson ,
College
St .,
perman~nt
eye Jr., Kenneth M. Deem, Carol
(Births, Oet. 9)1
imprisonment of ipdigent Hamilton County.
· Interlake, Inc., willlay off 146 Rutland. Mi-. Nicholson was cause
Willman, Parcel, Sutton:
Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Gillin- workers Monday (or eight pronounced dead upon the damage within seconds. .
persons charged with
Jimmy Deem, Carrie L.
Dr.
Arnquest ,
an
water, a son, Vinton.
weeks while its blast furnace arrival of the Ru t land Un it of
Deem,
WiUiam H. Willman,
the
Southeastern
Ohio · astronomer at UCLA, said
operation is closed.
Jr.,
Carol
.Willman, Robert
Emergency Med ical Serv ice.
PLEAsANT VALLEY
Acompany spokesman said ;-:uneral arrangements ·are Sunday the sun's infrared Deem, Roger D. Deem,
DISCHARGES - Mont production is heing halted be i nQ completed by the radiatioo can burn n&gt;l.-entire Kenneth M. Deem, Pearl P.
retina of the eye.
Hill, Leon ; Mrs. Jack temporarily because the steel Wal~er Funeral Home .
A partial eclipse will occur Deem, Jr., Sharlene M. Gray,
Williams, daughter, firm's inventory has grown
in Los Angeles beginning at Thelma Montgomery,
Gallipo lis ; Roy Woomer, !oo large for the current
1:14 p.m. PDT, while t~ Brenda J , Deem to Rubal
Point Pleasant; , Garland demand.
center of the total blackout Deem, Parcel, Sutton.
Buckley, Gallipolis; Mrs.
The company hopes to
Myrtle Stanley to Billie C.
will be abcut 1,200 miles
A thought for the day;
Dwight, DeBoard, Fraziers resume operations pi the
Stout,
Carol J. Stout, Parcels,
suuthwest.
writer
and
Bottom; Irene Kaepell, Point blast furnace in eight weeks American
Scipio.
·
Pleasant; 'Randy Lfvely, when officials believe the philosopher Henry David
DAVTOMEET
Letart; Mrs. Morgan Sayre, inventory will be at a mor ~ Thoreau said, " A:···true ·acTinged tips
Meigs County Chapter 53,
count of the actual is the
son, Leon; Mrs. · Jimmie accepblble level.
The next time you p&lt;&gt;llsh
Disabled
American
Veterans,
Interlake has 500 employes rarest (ioetry, for commOI!. will meet at 7,30 p. m. your nails, give them the look
Wood, son, Point Pleasant;
sense always takes a hasty
Mrs. Charles Guy, daughter, at the affected plant.
Tuesday at the chapter home of now by us)jtg a quarter nall
and
superficial view."
Vinton; Mrs. Jarrell Sigman,
on Butternut Ave., Pomeroy. · color to three-quarters clear
son, Gallipolis; Mrs. Albert
polish, for just a tinge of
Tarrls, Gallipolis ; Mrs.
color.
Jerome Baukey, Dayton, 0.;
•
Mrs. William Doolittle, Point Pleasant ; Earl Thornton,
Leon; John Gregory, New
Haven;
Mrs.
John
Cheesebrew, Point Pleasanfi
Diana Parsons, 1 Henderson,
and Darlene Early, Hun· 1
tington·.
Birth - A daughter to Mr.
1
and Mrs. William McKinney,
Point Pleasant.

Kazakhs tan before da wn
Sunday from the same pad
used for the launch of Sputnik
I into orbit 20 years ago.
The Soyuz 25 cosmonauts
lire a pair of rookies . who
never have flown a space
mission bel&lt;re.
The capsule is commanded
'bv Lt . Col. Kovalenok, 35, a
veteran Soviet air force pilot
and paratrooper who has

Sec·retarv

Treaty uniJcceptable in its
present form says Goldwater

La udermiU , Pomr ruy : Carol
G r ee ne , Pom e roy ; Fre da

Vya c hesla \'

s«ooo

the United States.
He said !he firm. has
secured an option to p\jrchase
the 217 acres of land east .of
the Ohio Transportation
Research Center, and that if
all goes well, another 2tiO
acres will he purchased from
the center for an auto plant
sometime in the future.
" If
the
motorcycle
assembly operation , meets
our expectations with respect
to such factors as the product
quality and costs as well as
ow- relations with labor, local
communities and
gove~ents,, and .. ?emwtd
and
other
economic
conditions So warrant, it is
out present intention to start
(Continued on p.ge 12)

Two Americans share·
Nobel Physics prize
KRJS

eight years to gain enough
energy to pay for the energy
you have invested to bulld a
solar heating system."
The Swedish academy said
van Vleck has been called
"the father of modern
magnetism&gt;""and his ideas
have played a key role in
development of the laser.
Anderson was van Vleck's
student at Harvard, and Molt
"bronght to the attention of
r e.searchers
and
popularized' ' Anderson's
inajor
wt'itten
work,
"Absence of Diffusion in
Certain Random Lattices,"
poblished in 19511, Londqvist
said .
(Continued on PICe 12)

Middleport cable .TV rates raised
Middleport Village Council
Monday night amended an
ordinance that increased
local cable television rates.
Representing PointView
Cable Television was Dick
Newell . The .amended

ordinance provides lor a rate
increase to $6 a month from
the present $5.50 for a single
home and a 25 percent
discount for senior citizens.
Senior citizens under . the
new rate will par $4.50 a

'

Rutland Gun. Club and Rutland Volunteel' Fire
Department; front row, Jess Freeman, Raccoon Valley
Sportsman's Club; Bill Grueser, Big Band BASS Anglers ;
Larry Well, lzaak Walton League and Bricklayers and
Allie~ Craftsmen Local, and John Grueser, President,
Fish i!nd Game Assn.
.i

month and disabled persons
will pay $4.50. The amended
ordinance provides for
installation charges of $15 but
Newell indicated that the
company does not have plans
. to Invoke that charge from
ihe present $10 char~e. T~
charge of each additional set
in a home is $l ·a month .
Ne\vell pointed out that
customers wbo hilve paid in
advance will be allowed the
old rate until their payment
runs out. He also pointed out
that residents with the
service can pay one year in
advance with a 10 percent
discount at the old rate if they
pay before Nov. I when the
new prices go into effect.
The amended ordinance
also provides that any flitw-e
rate increases must be filed
1
with council and approved by
counciL
Council approved the
September report of Mayor
Fred Hoffman showing
receipts of $1,656 in fines and
fees and $134 in merchant
police collections for a total of
$1,790. Clerk-Treasurer Gene
Grate repo•ted the receipt of
$3,848 in federal revenue
sharing funds .
.
Mayor Hoff'";lln reported

construction of the tennis
court is underway at the
community park using a
$7,000 grant. Total cost will be
about $17,800.
He also reported that a new
radar system · has been
received. The equlp111ent is
valued at $1,400 but the
village cost was only $163.
Three police officers already
have received training on the
equipment, the mayor
reported.
Council President Marvin
Kelly reported that he had
discussed with members of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion, the former
roadside park whic.h the post
owns. He said the post had
spent a ~eat deal of money ·
at the park, only to have it
vandalized. He said the post
is willing to spend mor'e ·
money but would have to be
assured of police protection
and of some help in
maintenance.
He said also that he
understood . the ' post to be
interested in giving the park
to some organization which
might build on it.
Councilman Dewey Horton,
who is interested in the park
(Continu~ on p.ge li~ ·

�•
2- The Oa th• Senttnel. MtddiPp.l ri·P•&gt;lller••l .0. Tuesda1·. Oet

•

11 ,197~

)

Hotel heist may go to Sl million

Legislature expects to give · schools
expanded borrow~g po':Ver in new bill
Bi· LEE LEUNAIIU
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLU MBUS t UPI ) MaJ Ority leaders in the Ohio
General Assembl y toda)'
wer e to name a special jomt
House-Senate ctJmmittee to
come up w1Ut a bill )&gt;y nut

members of tile House and

S e n a te
E duca ti o n
commtttees. IS to begm work
Wednesda)
Sena"' PreSident Pro Tempore Oliver Ocasek . D-Akron,
satd
and House Speaker
Vernal G. Riffe J r , D-New
week to aid the s ta te 's Boston, have dlrected th&amp;t a
financtallv troubled schools bill be prepared for
The pa.nel, compr ising o! constderauon when the full

ne

Se nate reconvenes Oct. 19.
The House wtll follow i day
later.
.
The essence of the b11l ,
according to Ocasek. will be a
further
expanston of the hor1
rowmg auUtority of school
distnct.s to prevent schoo l
rlosmgs because of a lack of

revenues.
Ocasek srud Tl Ohw school
distncts have been certJfted

as unable

w complete

the

calendar year because of

HEALTH

'

Lawrence E- Lamb. M.D.

Alcohol is poor
tranquilizer
By La"reoce E. Lamb. M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I jUSt
read ) our colwnn about the
lady • ho likes to smoke and I

to depend1ng upon the doctor
to prO\ tde hfe and health
e' erla sung regardless of

have some add1t10na l com-

\\ hat t he~ do
No. I am not gomg to en-

ments that I feel from deep
ms tde my conscience . . Afte r

say that dnnktng trrespon-

dorse ) our bad habtt but I w111

stbl\· IS also hazardous to
old l'.e grown mcreasmgil ) our hea lth I would co ncur
dependent on m) vtce. I also that a warning label should
resent the comments made be on every be\ erage con·
b) people that It's a nast) tammg alcohol. It IS a potson.
hab1t and offends p&lt;&gt;ople It does destroy health .. persoc1ally. But ma} I ask "h) sonality and famthes
I am sendmg you The
ever) one makes such a btg
deal of smoking and com· Health Letter number H.
ple tely tgnores those who Alcohol. Whiskey, Gm,
dnnk themselves mt o a Vodka. Rum. Wme. Beer
stupor evecy mght because Others "ho want thiS tssue
can send 50 cents wtth a long,
they want to relax '
f fe&lt;ll resentful toward peo- stamped. self-addressed
ple "hen Utey dnnk and envelope for It to me tn ca re
become different from the of this newspaper. P 0 Box
persons they really are ! They !55!, Radw Cuy Statton, New
become obnoxtous, mouthy York, NY 10019 It Will gtve
and care less about anyone's you a lot more m·formauon on
feelmgs and there are those how alcohol is hazardous to
"ho suddenly become qwet your health You mtght be
and are about as much com- wtse to share 1ts content wtth
pany as a brick wall.
some of those m your life who
They dm e and cause many use too much alcohol '
.
There are a lot of people
acctdents that m many cases
mvolve mnocent peopje and "ho both drmk to excess and
mcom emence pe ople by sm oke The combmauon IS
"passmg out " and havmg to like pia} mg Russtan roulette
be earned out Thanks. but if ;\1th two chambers of the
there's a chmce, I'll take revolver mstead of JUSt one
smokmg It's much less
lnctdentally 1t ts not true
that
alcohol relaxes a per.On
hazardous
DEAR READER- Funny, It may be a soc1al lubncant
but I had an tdea that you for some people but 11 ts a
may have had someone close depressant or an anesthettc
to you m mmd when :-,. ou were The person may not feel his
complammg about the effects anx1ety or tenswn but he has
of drmkmg on the personali- not relieved 1t wtth alcohol
He has only numbed hts
ty.
There ts no reason why you senses. It ts not a good tran·
need to choose between two qutllzer A much better and
bad habits l don 'I recom- more healthy tranquiliZer IS
mend drmk1ng instead of exerctse. A good walk, a
smokmg and I don't recom· sw1m, or parttctpatwn m
mend smokmg mstead of some sport you enJOY ts much
drinkmg. My advtce ts don't more relaxmg and much betdo etther.
ter fo r a person's health. A
Alcoholism ts a severe pro- wtfe can help m this area by
blem. Dtd you know ctrrhosts plannmg fanuly actiVIties at
of the liver 1s the fourth com· the end of the day that promon cause of death m VIdes healthy exerctse.
Amencan men between the
Dr. Lamb answers
ages of 35 and 54 and that 60 representative letters of
per cent of these hver deaths general mterest m his col·
are caused by alcoholism? wnn Wnte to him m care of
It's true It IS JUSt another ex· thts newspaper, P 0. Box
ample of how people affect 1551, Radw Ctty Statton, New
thetr own hea lth, as opposed York, NY 10019
smokmg smce I "as 12 j ears

Southern High FF A
busy first six weeks

other machtnery. They had
the opporturuty to observe

Flagg and Bob Lee.
The 47 FFA members also
were involved in a number of
regular class activtties. The
JUnior and senior class
worked on the new 1977-78
FFA program of activities,
parhamentary
procedure,
farm records and weed
identlftcatton. The
sophomores have been m·
valved wtth the new program
of activities, parliamentary

and compare vanous corn

procedure, farm rec.ords,

hybrids and varieties of other
groups and could also secure

hunter safety sotls and
pesllctdes The freshmen
st udi~d the FF A structure
and history, sotls, budgets,
agricultural
job
op·
portunitles, selection of a
project and a few basic hand
tools.
All FFA actiVIties stopped
due to the closing of schools in
the Southern Local District
last Friday and will not
resume until school reopens.
IndiVIduals plannmg to
purchase steers for the fair
should watch this newspaper
for feeder calf sales.
A pestictde and chemical
applicatiOn meetmg has been
moved from Southern to
Me1gs Htgh School in the

RACINE - The Southern
High School Future Farmers
of Amenca putlll a busy first
SJx weeks of school.
The group attended the
farm sc1ence revtew where
they vtewed over $15 mtllton
worth of farm equipment and
supplies mcluding new gram
drymg and handling devices,
tractors, d1scs, combmes and

information about va rio us

breeds of ca ttle, hogs, and
sheep and handlmg devices.
The FF A, In cooperation
with the Future Homemakers
of Amertca at the school,
organized a hayrtde at Ute
Herb Ervm farm where they
played football and held a
wtener roast. The two groups
also prepared a float for
homecoming.
The soil judging team of the
organization placed St!!'ond in
co unty competition and had
the second highest scorer in
Albert Holman. Rocky Van
Meter of Eastern placed ftrst
In district compett\lon, the
group placed sixtll when RICk
Flagg scored -the highest in
the contest. Members of the
team include Randy Smith,
Becky McGraw, Deanna
White,' Albert Hohlfan, Rtck

vocational agnculture room

loca ted at the back of the
building and will be held at
7:30p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 18
An examination IS scheduled
for Wednesdliy, Oct. 26

cash shortages.
The legtslature passed a
bill 10 days ago expanding
borrowmg powers for school
d1 s tracts wh1ch approve

the notes to be sold
Ocasek satd he bopes· the
speci al committee wtll
expand thts even furUter w
give inunediate borrowing
powers w dtstrtcts which
ha\•e not passed levies Utts
fall
He satd the committee will
have to decide whethe• to
ext end
the
tmmedaate
borrowmg authonty to

dislncts which have l.ned and
failed lo pass levaes, oc even

further , w those which have
oot attempted new operating

levtes
Ln any case, Ocasek said, a
prov1ston would prob8bly

have to lie mcluded allowtng

operating levtes thiS fall
Stgned mto emergency law school dtstncts to carry over
by Gov James A Rhodes last tlletr debts from one ca1endar
week, Ute bill permits about year ro another.
A spectal proposal to Utat
14 qualifymg dtstncts, if lbetr
effect
for Cleveland failed
levtes pass, w unmed1alely
late
last
month , but Ocasek
borrow money from next
S81d
11
could
be applied to all
) ear's anbc1pated revenues ,
wruvtng the normal threeweek adverttsmg per1od on

d1stncts,

provtded

they

of
Edu catton wtth
a
satasfact ory repayment

schedule
The sttuatton is e~pedally
cnttcal for Cleveland 's
110.000 puptls, Ocasek said,
be cause state Audit or
Thomas E . Ferguson has
recommended an Oct. 17
closing date to keep that
distnct from running out of
mooey.
Local schbol officials have
mamtatned Cleveland has
enough money to remain
open through Oct. 28 by
shifting funds .
Ocasek said the alternative
to a revised borrowing law
would be a supplemental
approprtatton of $19 million to
Cleveland schools.
"That wouldn't solve anythmg, " said Ocasek. "It
would JUSt encourage them to
go deeper mto debt, and we 'd
have 590 other school districts
wanting an appropriation ."

NEW YORK tUPI) - The four men
walking mw the lobby of the luxurious
Sherry Netherland Hotel loo ked like
busmessmen , but the " busmess" they had
m mihd wa s robbery

'!11e four pulled guns, handcuffed four
employes, and made off with tens or
thousands of dollars m cash and gems
from the hotel' s vault Some officials said
Ute haul could reach as htgh as $1 million.
, No one was.mjured m the holdup before
dawn Monday at Ute FtfUt Avenue hotel ,
the scene of a Similar stickup m 1974 that
netted some $90Q,OOO from the safe deposit
boxes contatrung valuables of the hotel 's
wealthy clientele.
The hotel 's lobby , whtch overlooks the
south end of Central Park, was empty
when the four heavyset men, dressed in
busmess su1ts and wearmg WJgs and false
mustaches, entered about4 ;30 a.m. , pollee
said.
They walked up w the desk, pulled
handguns and herded mght Manager
Robert Clancey and three nther employes

.
were

J

into a storage room where they
handcuffed and left inside.
As Ute mght security man was making
Ius rounds ori the upper floors, Ute bandits
spent the next 45 mmutes prying open
more Utan 100 of the 554 small boxes in Ute
vault room behind Ute main desk
Hotel officials said tlley would not know
the exa ct amount Ill gems, cash and other
valuables taken until an extensive audtt is
completed But a pollee spokesman said
the thteves probably made off with "tens
of tllousands of dollars" in booty.
Hotel Manager Phtlip Landau said after
the robbers firushed, Utey went back to the
storage room where Clancey, bellman
Steve McPartland, mght auditor William
Farragher and porter Jay Morton were
handcuffed and told them not to move for
10 minutes
" When a man pomts a gun at you, you
just hsten," McPartland said, "! didn't
have tune to get scared . It happened so
fast You just blindly do what they said."

.-

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN

UPI Sporll Edllor

furrush Ute state Department

'

secret by national agency
quoted the scaenttst, Thomas
H Glenn, as saY.ing he was
"pressured by NHSTA to
testify before Congress that
the test results were
mconclUSive, but I reststed.
" U UtiS goes any further,"
Glenn satd, "the bastards are
gomg w kill me "
The
News
satd

congressional

mvestagators'

found that NHTSA officials
wtthdrew the test results
Aug. 26 shortly after Glenn ,
who suffers from a heart
SHERIFF JAMES PROFFITI "arrests" Metgs County Treasurer George Collms at the
condition, had placed Utem on
Tuppers Plams Elementary School fall carmval Collins IS a native of Tuppers Plams
the public docket - a means
of making them available to
interested parties.
The test results were returned w the docket a week
later, but only after , Rep .
John Dingell, D-Mich , and
several other congressmen
TUPPERS PLAINS By JOAN HANAUER
demanded they be released w Tenned a "huge success" Tuppers Plams Branch, Vtsta Motors, Pennzoil Station,
UPI Television Writer
Ute public, the newspaper was the fall carnival held 2, Taylor Hardware, G. and J . Francis Fl orist, Pomeroy
Auto Sales, K and G Datry Motor Co., Pomeroy Pastry,
NEW YORK (UP!) -When was Ute last tune you saw a said. Dingell is a vigorous foe
recently
at
the
Tuppers
Queen
, Conkle Antiques, K and C. J ewelers, Elber·
television commercial in whtch a woman held an executive of mandatory air bags.
Plams
Elementary
School.
Marian'
s Campmg, Lod· felds, Swtsher and Lohse,
position ?
The investtgawrs also told
Credited
for
the
success
of
wtck
's,
all
Tuppers Plams ; Metgs Inn, Pomeroy Barber
Probably never, because compan1es and thetr advertising The News that an NHTSA
the
venture
were
room
Washburn
L.
Franklin Ins., Shop, New York Clothing,
agencies apparently believe men would have trouble acceptJng staff analysis evaluating tbe
mothers,
parents
and
Lena
Beauty
Shop,
Dorothy Karr Barber Shop, V. D.
a woman m a pt1sit10n of authority over men - sav, ..... :: bank test results was wtthheld
numerous
contributors.
Beaut
y
Shop,
Roots
Gas Edwards Ins. , Fashi on
loan offtcer.
,
from Congress until Sept. 26
The
evenmg
opened
with
Station,
Coolvtlle
Mill,
Beauty Shop, Mullen Ins.,
That was Ute theory at a recen t lunch at Metropolitan We By then, both Ute House and
supper at 6 and food and Burdette Camper Sale, Datly Sentmel , Blue and
Insurance in New York. part of 11 Women in Busmess Week" Senate
had completed
were
served Delores McLead, Buck's Grey, Marguerite 's Shoe
organiZed by th e New York Assoctallon of Women Busmess hearings on resolutions w drtnks
throughout the evening. Barber Shop, Tri County Store, Chapman Shoe Store,
Owners
overturn an order by
Sttlfler's, Ktddie Shoppe,.
The lunch zeroed m on "The Image of Women m TelevisiOn Transportation Secretary There was a haynde for the Bank, Manley Antiques,
Insurance ,
aU'
Commerctals" with a presentation by Ute Screen Acwrs Gutld Brock Adams requiring children until dark. Activtties Arcadia Nursing Home, all Davis
Pomeroy.
Kathleen Nol81), national prestdent of SAG op&lt;&gt;ned w1Ut a installation of atr bags on for parents and children Coolville.
Lowe's , Belpre Butlding
Shuler's Market, Twm Ctty
speech, m whtch she pomted out 41i per cent of all wome,n 16 some new cars in the 1982- mcluded a dtsh throw, cork
gun, rmg the can, fish pond, _ Materials, Lofty Htll, R. and Gateway ,Km g Builders,
years and over were in the work force, while stay..at-homes model year.
movies, treasure chest,
~~represen t 25 per cent of American women, yet they are the
The air bag rule will take engravmg, cake walk, S. Frame, Pizza Hut , Red Baker Furmture, Village
Market,
Holden Pharmacy, H. and R.
target group most being sought by clients and tradttional effect
Friday
unless football and basketball Barn
Market,
Belpre
:
Sears, Fnestone , Cash
Bahr
marketmg strategies ''
_
ov~rturned by both Ute House
throws, "ye olde mall, 11 dart Bernard Fultz, Charles Clothiers, lngel's Furniture,
Part of the reason is obvious- they are the women ·who are and Sena"' •
game, set up the bo\tle and a Knight, Powell's, Meigs Dutton Drug, Dudley Florist, ·
at home and able to watch television durmg Ute daytune.
The allegedly suppressed spook
house.
Branch, Athens County Betsy Ross &amp;kery, R. C.
WheUter tlley really worry about waxy yellow buildup and tests, conducted for NHTSA
For
the
first
tune
a
"jail"
Savmgs
and Loan, Crow, Bottlmg .co., Mark V, Midcrmge at the possibility of ringaround-the-eollar IS another b) Calspan, a private
was
added
to
activtttes
and
Crow
and
Porter, G. and J . dleport · Book Store, Radio
matter.
research firm in Buffalo,
for
25
cents
youngsters
could
Auto
Parts,
Moore's Store, Shack and Meigs Plaza, all
In song and sketches, some SAG members had fun with some N.Y.,
compared
the
put
the.ll'
friends
,
parents
and
Dale
Warn
er
Insuran ce, Mtdtlleport.
old standbys, such as the man m Ute laundromat who effectiveness of atr bags
teachers
m
the
jail
wtth
Farmers
Bank
and
Savings
approaches a housewife, tells her he "is here to prove a point," versus safety belts in four
Summerfield's, Ridenour
Meigs
Sheriff
James
Profitt!
Co.,
Pomeroy
Flowe
r Shop, Supply, Newell Sunoco,
and offers her 57 cents for her mohair coat.
offset c'olhslons of cars
There's Ute woman who confesses gwltily to her psychiatrist travelmg at 30 miles per on hand to give them an Dr. Harold Brown, Quality Baum Lumber, Gaul Shake
assist.
Print, Crow's Steak House, Haven ,
Utat , among thmgs, she has aluminum pock marks, water bour.
Gaul's
Maf ·
Adding
to
the
success
of
the
Karr
and
:VanZandt,
Midway
spots on her glassware, severe static cling, "plus my plastic
ket
,
Kay
's
Beauty
Shop,
all of
None of the cadavers and
carnival
were
the
donations
Market,
Certthed
Gas,
wrap keeps corning undone. "
Chester.
dummj,es used a's test
Then tllere's Ute one that the SAG performers tagged "the subJects m the seat belt· of area merchants who in· Modern Supply, Sunshine
Ltbby Sayre and Pat ·
most chauvinistic commerctal on television today, in which a eqwpped cars suffered crash eluded Helen's B-A Beauty Center, Ashland Oil , Dr. Shnvec.s., co-chaionen, exman , m patron1Zlng tones, brags, ''This IS my wife, my little unpacts over Ute mjury limit Shop, Ashland Gas, Sohio Selun Blazewicz, Pomeroy tended thanks to all those who
Cole's
Lumber, Cement B\J)~ k . ,,i lrestone, helped make the event so
wife. She takes care of me ... " and winds up with, "My wife-! set by passive restraint Gas,
Pomeroy
National
Bank, Landmark , Smith-Nelson successful.
Utink I'll keep her."
·
standards. Two of the
The discussion Uten went to a panel of experts including one cadavers and one of the
distinctly embarrassed male direcwr of televiston commer- dummtes in Ute air bag cars
Cials - Peter Israelson. Israelson admitted the parodies hit would have been killed had
close to home, and spoke of the "gross stereotyping of Ameri- they been living humans, the
can women. "
tests showed.
He made one other pomt - these comm'ercials sell their
The
News
quoted
PfOducts.
congressional mvest1gators--'
Another panelist was Frances Sternhagen, who most as saying Ut~t Glenn, the
VIewers know best as Mrs. Marsh, the babysitter m a NHTSA SCientist, was
wathpaste commercial.
established stars.
subjected w "a systematic By PAULA SCHWED
clauned the hUe of the year's
She made it clear why actresses accept roles that stereotype pattern of harrassment"
NASHVU.LE, Tenn. (UPI)
Dolly Parton, favored to best mstrumental group.
women - tlley like to eat. That means the actress takes the after he placed the test _ Blind singer Ronnie Milsap win best entertainer or top
''Forty-five years in the
best commerctals she can get, but if Ute checkbook is low , it results m the pubhc docket. cut loose w1Ut a yell Monday female vocalist, left the
business
and this is Ute first
may be necessary wcompromtse. But there are limits.
as he stepped up to claim his ceremony empty-handed. tune winning," said band
IItle as country mustc's Waylon Jennings, also member Leon McAuliffe with
HYSELL ASSIGNED
entertainer of the year in considered a frontrwmer but glee.
FT. ORO, Calif.
addttwn w honors for top who won nothing tllis year,
Some 5,000 members of the
Spectalist Four Charles R.
male vocalist and the boycotted the awards saying CMA representmg all
Hysell, son of Mr. and Mrs.
they foster unnecessary segments of the $300 million
industry's best album
Robert M Hysell, Syracuse,
Fellow performer s rivalry.
music industry centered in
Ohio, recently was asstgned
glittering wtth jewels and
"Lucille," which tells of a Nashville chose master
as a nuclear weapon s
sequined outftts echoed hts barroom encounter with a musician Merle Travis to be .
mamtenance ~pecialist wtth
By VIda Green
derful time . One of the joy, jumping to their feet w woman and Ute husband she Ute Country Music Hall of
the U. S. Army Garrison
Thts is a very hard Jetter patients, John Smith, won applaud the singer's sweep of deserted "with four hungry Fame's 30th member.
here. He is a 1972 graduate of for me to write as our very second prize in the hog th e
Country
Music kids and a cro}1 in the field, "
Johnny Cash, who hosted
Southern Local Htgh School, dear and wonderful fnend calling contest. He received a Associatt o n
awards won song of the year honors the awards show and was
Racane
and coordinator Kathie prize of $2 which made him ceremony
for Kenny Rogers and best nominated for illduction. inw
Ftls~nger resigned to return very happy.
"There's a lot of good talent songwriter awards for Roger Ute Hall of Fame, early in the
THE DAILY SENT.JNEL
to school to get her master's
It 's most rewarding when m this industry and f 'm not Bowling and Hal Bynum.
evening cautioned fellow
DEVOTED TO THE
degree. On Sept. 7 we had a you can bring a smtle to their sure I'm deserving," Mtlsap
Roger said, lilfhey snicker performers
INTERE.'!TOF
against
MEIGS-MASON AREA
g9lqg away ptcnic for her at face and put a glint in their said as well-wishers pumped the first hme they hear it, but underestlma ling
their
CHESTER 1.. TANNEHfl.l
Royal Oak Park wtth all eyes.
his arms and slapped him on the next time around they're lalents.l
En.: Ed
ROBERTHOEHICH
senior friends and five guests
At Arcadia we are starting Ute back. "!want my friends smgmg the words . It's
''If you're even nominated
Cit) Edttor
present,
including
a
very
our
Christmas
project
around
where
are
Utey?
today
's
'On
Top
of
Old
for
ooe of these awards, one
P ubh~ h ed dwly CX lcpt S&lt;:~tlJ rd&lt;~ y
dear frtend and ex-co-worker, making fruit bowls and card It's been a long road and I Smokey.'"
h) The OhiO V &lt;~ llcy Pu bh ~ hm g Cum
Utlllg's for sure," Cash told a
&lt;my Ill Cuurt SJ , Pomeroy, Oh1o
Mtldred Betzing. Kathie was haskets out o! greeting cards. didn 'f expect w win."
The vocal duo of the year national television audience,
~ fo769 B u~ m ~~~ ()ffll C Phone !1 9'~
Milsap, who was born blind award went to Jim Ed Brown "you ain't yesterday's
Very surprised . She received They always meet us with a
2156 Edl turt&lt;l l Phurw9!l2·Z l57
St..'(:und tbts.!l l'~:;!.(jgc pa1 d al
several nice gilts including . smile and tell us we have just but mastered violin, plano and Helen Cornelius while the chittlin's.''
Pumeruy, Oh1u
money to help her along the made their day three hours and gwtar by Ute time he was Statler Brothers were pteked
Nillwnal ad vc rlr ~ fn g rcpre~en
I&lt;Jllvc Wartl
r.r1ff1th Company,
12, won the male vocalist best vocal group for the sixth
way. We regret losmg her , shorter.
lilt . Bulllflclll and Gd ll.r~htr Drv
award
in 1974 and 1976. .
year in a row .
but wish her the best of luck
Since Jim Lansford,, our
757 Third Avt•, New Ym k NY
Crystal Gayle , .her hip·
JOOii
Roy Clark, whose banjo NEW TRADE PREXY
at Ohio State.
acting coordinator cannot
SullSt rlptw n 1atcs Od ivcn,:d IJ}
length
hall'
swinging
ltke
and
guitar picking highlights
The
next
week
was
meet
wtth
us
weekly,
Pam
CHICAGO (UP!) -Robert
t,rr rw1 1\ ht•rt .rv.J rl.rhte 75t ents pt:r
sleek
curtains
around
her
the
homegrown humor of Wilmouth, former executive
Yesteryear !! at the Senior Rtffle , Senior Friends
1.\. Clk By \1utur ll uutc wltCI c ~:at ncr
st'r\"lrt 11111 .r\•/ll lulltt Unt mu nlh,
Cittzens Center. Three staff secr~ary , has been doing a face, satd it was the sultry "Hee Haw," was chosen vice president and a direcwr
$l25 H) IIIHII J/1 Ohtu 1111!1 w Vlol .
members
from Athens wonderful job keepmg things ballad, "Don't It Make My instrumentalist of Ute year. of the First National Bank of
Om· Yt ar $ 2~ 00 , SrX rmmlhl',
$11 ;,0, '/ hrct• 111 u111hs
s1 n0
Mental
Health Center 1 gomg smoothly. And in Brown Eyes Blue," which The Original Texas Playboys, Chicago, has been nam..
f. bcv. hcn $2!i 00 } t•cH, S1:o; miJ ntiL~
brought 11 patients, four of closing, agom I say from the won her best female ' vocalist assembled by Ute late Bob president and chief executive
f l.l 50
fhl I ~· III UII[h s
$7 :;,()
Su!J~&lt; r rpl/un flll&lt; t' rntl utlt•s Sruut,n
wh om were our spe ctal bottom of my heart: Good honors over her sister, Wills who was ~nown as the officer of tbe Chicago Board
1 Utles-.Sr rrlrm !
~
ln retta Lynn, and other well· kmg .,t of western swing, of Trade.
contacls. They had a won- I.uck, Kath., 1
II

TV•••in Revi-ew

Success of carnival noted

Blind sing~r his country's
•
ent ert8Jner.
0 f the year' ·

·Senior Friends' activities

during month of September

•

NEW YORK (UP! ) - The oddsmakers like ' he Dodgers to
win Ute World Se&lt;ies and I agree with tllem. Los Angeles in stx
IS the way I see •t.
One of the big reasons has to do with the man who's gmng
agaUISt the Yankees !&lt;&gt;night , Don Sutton. He's a " money
pttcher," the kind who certamly can be beaten, but one who
will never beat himself.
The 32-year-old, curly-haired right-hander from Clio, Ala ., is
what the oUter ballplayers call "a wtnner, " which means he
doesn't gag ·in wugh situations. He doesn 't choke.
"Whenever we're in a big ballgame, Don always riSes tO the
.occasiOn," says left-hander Tommy John, who pitched tbe
pennanl·dincher for the Dodgers against the Phi lUes and wtll
start Friday night's Utird Senes game in Los Angeles. "Every
hme I see him go out Utere in game like this one, I'm
confident. "
Tommy John isn't blowing smoke up Don Sutton's back. He 's
merely making a sta"'ment completely m keeping wtUt
Suttoo's record. When 1t comes to pitching m World Sertes,
playoff or All-Star games, Sutton 's record is perfect and Utere
aren't too many other pitchers around who can make that
statement.
He was a Wor ld Series wmner m 1974 agaUISt the A's, beat
Ute Pirates twtce m the playoffs that same year and was the
winning pitcher lll this year's All-Star game. Sutton ha s
pttched m 10 of Utese games, countmg Ute World Sertes,
playoffs and All-Star contests, and has never been beaten once
One thing you can depend on. The pressure of fa cmg "' team
like the Yankees tsn 'tlikely to get to Sutton the way 11 dtd to
some of those younger Kansas City pi tchers m Sunday mght 's
playoff fUJale.
Sutton's approach to tomght's asstgnment ts prectsely what
it should be, thoroughly professwnaland not too emottonal.
"ThiS ts one of Ute world's greatest spectacles and you
should enjoy 1t," he says " I wtll I'm domg what f always
wanted to and plan on enJoymg every mmute of 11, because I
may never be here agam. If I lose, they won 't shoot me at
sunnse, and if I wm, Utey won 't give me the keys to the ctty nor
will my 7-year-old son, Daron, or 3-year-old daughter, Staci, be
any more unpressed w1th me than they are now "
That's the way Don Sutton talks.
Listerung to Sutton re1111nds me of the way Terry Bradshaw
talked on the Steelers' second tnp to Ute Super Bowl after the
1975 season
" I'm here to have a good time and enj oy myself," said the
Pittsburgh quar"'rback, and that's exactly what he dtd,
completing mne passes foc 209 ya rds and two touchdowns m a
21-17 vtctory over Dallas.
Somehow, the Dodger players generally don't seem as tense
or uptight as a number of the Yankee players do and that may
be due w the fact that gettmg to this pomt wasn't as much of an
crdeal fer them as 1t wa s for the Yanks. Also, the Dodgers
don't have any particular ego problems
, That was espectally eVIdent before- Ute playoffs when a
newsman asked SutWfi whom he felt should be the Dodgers'
first game pttcber
" I said I thought we should go wtlh our best m the operung
game," he commented durmg Monday's hnal pre...Seraes'

workout at Yankee Sladmm
"'Who 's that?'" Sutton contmued, repeating the queshon

that was put whun "'Tommy John ,' I satd "
The Dodger players are hke that There doesn't seem to be
any backbiting or harping among them over who makes more
money .
.
'"Sui' was very kind w say tllat," satd John upon hearmg
what Sutton had to say about hun, "! feel he was correct m
saying that. By Uta! , I mean we have five starters on this club
and I had the best season among tllem, but that's not saytng I
am the No. 1 pitcher on this ball club. We do not have a No. I
pttcher on Utts ball club. What difference does it make what

NEW YORK (UP!) - The New York Yankees and the Ins
Angeles Dodgers, two tcruns which have created some of the
most memorable moments m World Senes history , meet m the
itrst game of a best-of._seven playoff for the world

Natwnal League play off competitiOn and is 1..() m tlie World
Series, while Gullett, a former sta r for the Cmcmnall Reds, IS
2-1 m World Senes com~Ut1o n w1lh a 2.12 earned run average
"This guy, Don Sutton, ha s won more games than anyone m

championship tonight w1th each manager bankmg on h1s

the htstory of the Los Angeles franeh1 se," satd Dodgers'
Manage r Tom L'ISQrda. "We couldn 't ask for a better pttcher

"money" pitcher
Right-hander Don Sutton,a Yankee fan as a kid who fulfllled
his lifetime ambition of pttching 111 Yankee Stadium dunng last
July's All-Star Game, wtll •iart for the Dodgers, while the
Yankees will counter wtth left.!Jander Don Gullett.
The Dodgers are 6-5 favorttes for the first game and a 13-10
choice to win the Series
~
Both pitchers have a reputatiOn of bemg at the~r best in post-

to start us off "
Sultoo makes 1t clear this wtll be work and not play.
The selectwn of Gullett to pitch is somewhat surpnsmg smce
Ut e fastballlng left.!Jander JVas believed w be flrushed for the
season after hurting hts shoulder in the first game of the
playoffs against Kansas Ctty. But, Manager Billy Martm 's
staff is so arm-weary from the playoffs he is left wtth little

season competition. Sutton boasts a perfect 3-0 record m

choice .

PITTSBURGH (UP!) Coach Chuck Noll o( \be
Pittsburgh Steelers ts looking
for a healthy quarterback w
start agamst the Cinemnati
Bengals Monday mght at
Three Rivers Stadiwn
Pittsbur gh's No.1 and No 2
SJgnaJ.callers - Terry Bradshaw and Mtke Kruczek were Injured Sunday m a T/.
10 loss w Houston. Bradshaw
suffered a fractured left wrist
and Kruezek a shoulder
separation.
Bradshaw satd he wanted
w play ag8Ulst the Bengals,
but Steeler offtcials say no
dectswn will be made on hun
until tater m the week .
Bradshaw was hopeful team
doct&lt;&gt;rs could rtg up some
kind of a flexible cast on hts
left wrtst that would enable
him w take snaps.
In the meantune, Noll wa~

By ED SAINSBURY
UPI Sports Writer
CHICAGO (UP!) - Bob
Avellmt
achieved
an
ambition Moo day rught and 1t
paid off in a victory for the
Chicago Bears.
The one-time Maryland
quarterback , starting his
~d game as the Bears'
signal-caller, called his own
plays-for the first hme with
amazmg success. He threw
Utree touchdown passes and
Bob Thomas kicked a 33-yard
field goal to gtve the Bears a
24-23 deCISIOn over the l..os
Angeles Rams.
" We cut down on our game
plan and wid Bob early in the

1

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•

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FOR 6 MONTHS OR 6,000 MILES
All work is done with genuine V.W. replacement parts
and Installed by framed V.W. mechantcs
OFFER GOODOCT.ll -31

'

NEW YORK (UP!) - The
probable

lineups

for

Tuesday's f1rst game of the
World Ser tes·
los Ang
New York
Lopes 2b
Russe ll ss ,

Smith rf

Rivers cf
Nettles Jb

Munson c

Cey Jb
Ga r vey lb
Baker If

agree to return, a grim-faced
Noll srud Monday that "Graff
mtght be the starte r "
he&lt;;ause he ijt least knew the
system from warming the
bench for 11 games last year.
"(Stoudt), hasn't played a
good deal - I tllink he played
one quarter durmg the pre-

Burks cf

Yeager c

Jackson rf
Chambliss l b
Ptntella If

.•. FROM
DEFECTIVE WIRING

Randolph 2b
Dent ss

Sutton p

Gullett p

Umpires

Pl ate · Nest or

Chylak !All , Forst base Ed
Sudol (NL) , Second base
Larry McCoy IAL I, Third

base Jerry Dale (NLL Left
ftel d Jtm Evans (All. R1ght

foeld

John McSherry (ALl .

season," Noll satd. "But he's

got good potential "
Noll was reluctant to take and Kruczek were the worst
Dungy away from practice Ute Steelers' suffered in the
wtth the def~nse , because of game wiUt Ute Oilers.
the posstbthty of further
Wide receiver Frank Lewts
mJurtes m the secondary, sprained his neck and br uised
where Mtke Wagner already his back, running back
has been benched for the Reggie Harrison sprained hts
season w1th a cracked left knee; rookie runrung
vertebrae lll the neck.
back Sidney Thornton
"We hope we can get spramed hls left wrist; rookie
somebody m so Dungy can be linebacker Denms WUISton
our third quarterback and we spramed his right knee and
can work hun a little btt both rookie linebacker Dave
ways," Noll srud
LaCrosse pulled a groin
The InJuries w Bradshaw muscle.

great catches on the other
two wuchdown strikes.
Aveliim out-pttched the
Rams' quarterback star Joe
Namath, who wound up
completmg likof-40 passes for
203 yards But he threw four

mterce ptton s, wa s sacked

tWJce for 19 yards and fat1ed
to connect for a touchdown.
"I had trouble handlmg the
ball m the first half," Namatll
srud, speaking of the rain,
which drenched the arttfictal
surface of· Soldter Field for
the first two quarters of the
game. ""! don't know about
the receivers but

1t

was

slippery for me."
But Namath and linebacker
lstah Robertson called the
Bears a team of "cheap shot"

on fumbles and once on a pass
mtercep tw n.

CINCINNATI (UP!) cinnati Reds President
Howsam, responding to
lished reports of trade

Cin·
Bob
pubpos-

sibtlihes, has vowed that

centerflelder Cesar
Geron uno sttll wtll be m a
Reds ' uniform when spring
traming rolls around
"I'll say it now. and I'll say

NEW YORK (UP!) -The
American League champion
New York Yankees will
receive a glowing sendoff
tonight as they en"'r the
World Series to do battle with
Ute Los Angeles Dodgers.
Robert T10ker , general
manager of the Emptre State
Building, satd that for the
second

time

m

Today ·s family household gene ra lly
contains major and small appliances.
Be sure there are no frayed or worn
cords and that you have a sufficient
electrical input. Avoid octopus extensions from one outlet. Get extra
protection with fire insurance. Call
our agent today.

~

Rams

three of lhe Bear turnovers

Rafael Sepllen hooted held
goals of 22 and 2\J yards and
Lawren ce
McCutcheon
talhed on a twoyard run to

gwe the Rams a lJ..IJ lead
before Avellim connected on
the two scoring passes to
Scott· for a 14-13 Chicago
advantage. But after the
Uttrd Bears' fumble, Septten
kicked a 24-yard held goal to
gtve the Rams a 16-14
halftune lead
In the fourth period, Bob
'!'hom as put the Bears m front
17-16 wtth a 33-yard field goal
before
Latta
caught
Avelhm 's thtrd scormg toss.

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"1 don't like it ," Namatll
said . " We don 't go for cheap
shots, Next time we play we 'll
beat them. Just look at the
films. The league will see
what's going on. "
Robertson said Bears' runmng back Walter Payton,
who rushed for 126 yards in 24
cames, the 12th !()().yardsplus game of hts career and
his third in four games flits
year, botll held and clipped
Rams' safety Btll Simpson on
one play Robertson also
accused Wally Chambers, the
Bears ' allpro ' defensive
lineman, of taking cheap
shoots.
The Bears turned over the
ball four times - three t1mes

came wtUt only 27 seconds w
play when Dwtght Scales
caught a 26-yard pass froin
relief quarterback Pat
Haden.
The Bears' win left both
"'ams wttll a 2-2 season
record. It ended a two-game
losing streak for the Bears
and snapped a two-game
winnmg streak for the Rams.

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4 dr . Power

it against next spring, Cesar
Geronimo Will ·not be
traded, "

349 49

III INCHr 241NCH

• Brmg natural warmth and beaut y to
your home
• 1"' msulatl ng gloss tempered
• Keyed locks for secunty l!lcluded
• Rough openmg - 6'6" 11. 6' 11 "

The fmal Ram s ' score

artiSts.

Monday.
Several days ago, a report
had Geronimo, pitcher Jack
Billingham and rookie first
baseman Dave Revering
gotng to the San Francisco
Gtants for pttcher John "The
Count" Montefusco.
"Whoever proposed that
couldn't make trades for
me,' 1 Howsam said. ~·I
wouldn't make that one tf I
had the chance." ,

+

atr

'3495
75 PINlO WAGON

said

2'6" X 6'8" X 1·3/ 8"

3'0" r 6'8" r l Y•"

HOLLOW CORIL&amp;UAN

HOLLOW CORE LAUAN

UISIO PANEl

PANEUD

ENTRANCE DDDR

HEMLOCK DOOR

ENTRANCE DOOR

FLUS" DOOR

~~\~E

6 cy l , a utomat tc, 26,000
m11es.

1177

• for entran ce or
tntermr door
• For shelves, table
tops, desks

'2795

Karr &amp;VanZandt

WITH SAFETY GlASS

~~\~£ 3555
• 3 hgh.t sty hog
• Tempered safety
gloss

2' 8 r6'8 ' 1l

~/ 8

WITH SAFETY GlASS

~~\~[ 5125
• \lert iCOI grotn door
• Reddy TO itn1sh

You' ll llk~ OuT" Quality

Way of Domg Busines s
GMAC FINANCING

pomeroy

992-5342

OPen Evenmgs ' til6 ·00'
Tt : 5 p.m Sat

TRY OUR OELICIOUS •

SANDWICHES
~ES.&lt;....

s ~-·_ :1;/'k

the

SkYSCraper's history the top
30 floors of Ute 102-story
structure will be bathed m the
Yankees' colors - blue and
white
The salute, which Will
continue throughout Ocwber,
is for the " Yankees '
contrtbutwn to the morale of
all New Yorkers," Tinker
said.

The

ca pttahzed by scormg after

Howsam ·won't trade 'Chief

big sendoff
New Potnts
New Plugs
Adtust Valves
Set Timing

The good feehng s will end tomght

Inc. '" ,,.,

Yanks to get

ALLPARTSANDLABORINCLUDED

·ceorge Stembrenner mv1ted their entire squ ad and their v.:Ives
to lunch at a posh resta urant this afte rnoon

Downing . Childs lnsurqnce

SAVE GAS
SAVE MONEY

ALL BEETLES

looking for quarterback replacements.
The candidates available
mclude Chff Stoudt, a rookie
quarterback from
Youngstown State who
played roughly one quarter in
one pre-season game before
he was assigned to the tax•
squad ; Netl Graff, a
perennial benchwarmer who
was cut durmg the Steelers'
trainmg camp and recalled
Monday and Tony Dungy, a
rookte
who
was
an
outstanding college
quarterback at Mmnesota.
The Steelers signed Dungy
as a free agent this year and
eventually made him a defenstve back . Dungy was
pressed into service Sunday
af"'r Bradshaw and Kruczek
were hurt.
Before the Steelers' had
reached Graff and got h1m w

Gullett. though, appeared ready for the challenge.
" I have wfeel 100 per cent now," he sat d. "I don't think any
p1tcher goes out Utere 100 per cent very often You do the best
you ca n wtth what you have on anygiven day ."
The Yankees and Dodgers ha ve met seven times previously
m World Series competition, w1th the Yankees holding a 6-2
edge. But , they have been matched only once - m 1963 -since
the Dodgers moved out of Brooklyn to Ins Angeles 20 } cars
ago Los Angeles swept that Series, four games to none, behind
a couple of pitchers named Don Drysdale and Sandy Koufax .
To show his respect for the Dodgers' club, Yankees' owm•r

·
•
I
R
·
Bears J0 t am:~;~~~~~~::::::::::::;:;::::~
s M""',."·-~'gency,

SERVICE SPECIAL

TUNE-UP SPECIAL

Starting lineups

•

VOLI&lt;SWAGEN

In these days of ever,increasing prices, it's
good to find a bargain and now Riverside
V.W. has the best bargain in town. A Tune·
Up specia I des1gned to keep your V. W.
running with efficient performance and
economy.

·

$teelers looking for
QB for Bengals game

week he would call the
plays," said Be&amp;rs' Coach
Jack Pardee "We tllought we
needed more leadership on
Ute fteld and that was one
way to get it."
Avellmi wound up wtth
number you are?''
three
spectacular l&lt;&gt;uchdown
Rtght there is another reason I like \he Dodgers to win
passes.
Two of Utem went to
Actually, what Tommy J ohn says IS Ute same thing George
James
Scott
and covered 70
Stembrenner has been trying to tell the Yankees aU along, only
and
72
yards
- the longest
he's haVIng a little trouble getting Uirough.
pass
completions
or
receptions for both Ute passer
and receiver. The winning
l&lt;&gt;uchdown came on a 29-yard.
'
, Utrow to light end 'Greg Latta.
"1 saw Greg in Ute end zone
and I had been kind of
scramblmg backwards so I
Utrew as hard and as high as I
could throw and he made a
great catch," Avelluu said of
the winnmg score.
He also credtted Scott for

Adtusl Idle

'

ers avore

0
Today's

Airbags controver-sy kept
DETROIT (.UP!) - The
Nat10nal Htghway Traffic
Saletv Administration suppressed test results htghly
unfavorable to atr bags and
threatened repr1S8ls against
one of 1\s sctenttsts who tried
w make them public, the
Detrotl News reported today.
The News, Ul a diSpatch
from tiS Washin~ton bure•u.

.
.
to win series·

&lt;

3- The Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , Oct. 11, 1977

DENNY'S
DAIRY VALLEY

a: DAIB.Y
· FOODS
I

(j)

~

HRS . 10 . 00 AM til11 nor .Vt ,:,u n · Thur s 10 00 A.M
ttl 12 00 P .M Fnday and Saturday

See Us At The Pom 10rpy Bend Bridge

l
I

POMEROY
CEMENT BLOCK CO.
'
.
The Department Store of Building
Since 1915

3'0"16'8" Xl ¥4"

~~\2E

5950

• Sol1d hemlock

• R01sed paneled
• Ready to f1 n1s~

,

�·.·.

,.

Huntington , W. \ 'a.

aA w~ have fnr a lun~. long

rt•tnl~

tunt'

\~ 1111't usc

We thmk we ·re an

COLC\IBl'S l'P! 1 Otun unpronn~ football team.
"(),., t1f the good tlungs.
State Coal'h WLliJd\ HHw~
and
I'm not uppoiogiung f~1r
"8.id \IClnday h~ t$ ·~\·ar~ but
n."
sa1d
Hayes. "is getting
not fearfu l" {If S..'l turd.~.'l\ 's
U1at
score
up th~re Ll6-&lt;l ea rly
Bur-kryr \'isit W iowa
.
.
in
thr
third
quarter l. It gives
" lowa always pia~ s Ohio
ypu
the
opportunity
h.l ~!!t
State tough." Hayes ttJ!d h1~
somt&gt;
uf
tht&gt;
~
OWlg
kids
in
n eekl~
press
lun L' h~tl!l
Uwrt.'
wJ.lhout
worr~1Ilg
.
They
.\lflnda) . " We regan;!. U1em as
a go(~ football tt:!am . We'll L!n "'''rk hard and they .ctesene
there

wan

fearStmle ...

out

·

but

ntl t

Hayes nNed the tnp tll
Iowa City - Ohll) Statt'-·s

seeond road game of the year
- will mark the first of four
homt'{'()ming games Ul which

the Buckeyes w11l be
invol ved , but "unfortunately
on !~
one lif
Col um bus ."

them

is

in

Ohio State and Iowa
m B1g Ten play, t,he
Bu ckeyes 1---1 CivE'ra U &lt;Uld the

· Both
are Q-1!

Hawke)es 3.2.
Hayes , a fter v1ewmg films
of Saturda)·'s -!6-&lt;l rout of

Purdue, still liked what he

saw .
"It •·as a pretty good da) ...

Hayes said. "one of the best.
from overall qualJty. We
played on about' as high a par

tt' play."

Hayes said the Buckeyes
came through the Purdue
contest with H mmirnwn of
inj uries , although r~serve
tight end Ron Banng (ankle \
is out' of Saturday's game
aga.inst
Iowa,· reserve
tailback

R 1c ky

Johnson

t knee ) ts doub tful and
starting tackle Joe Rob mson
1ankle l is ·:touch and gu."
F'ullback-tailback Jeff
Logan. 1.\·ho was tnjured
1anklel in the season's
opener and has been
hampered e\'er since, also
remains a question mark for
Iowa.
Logan rein)ured his ankle
against Southern Methodist
two weeks ago and sat out the
Purdue game.
·'lf he !511 't completely

r&gt;EW YORK (UP! I ~ His
best'friends wouldn 't tell htrn .
Walt F'raz:ier had to find out
the hard way that the New
York Knicks had traded htrn
to the Cleveland cavaliers.
"The same thing happened
to Wilt Chamberlain and
Oscar RobertSil n," Frazier
recalls . "The foWld out about
their
tr ades
in
the ·
newspapers . It wasn't too ·
S\U'prising that the same .
thing was done to me . After·
all, these guys were greater
than me.''
But Frazier says this was

not

a

hassle

management.

hUll \\' t' dt}fl 't want

fullb:le k · Jut· I
Pa;. t11n l~d thts week 's
Butkl'\ t.' lt:'af awards on the
tiff en&amp;•. euC'h ht-'ttUJg a rt&gt;et,rd
\0.
Word ~raded highest
runong the mtenor offensh·c
hrH'11HIIl. while P&lt;-lytvn.
freshman

qul('k!~

dt'\: t&gt;lopm~

,i

........

iVJonev

be~! wav to q c t

I

I.

I

I

a t rvt!

on l!lSu ranc e 1s. to
s ho p for 11. BUt th ere iHf'
more. th.nl three t housand
111
CO I1l PiU11CS
se lling
lt urance pOliCi e S to pt'otcCI'
nom cs
cars
ilnd
bus 1 ncs~es ,'· and
11 1sn ' t
pracltC'&lt;ll lor '{OU 10 t;.hCC k
~:&gt; act1 anct c&lt;v c rv one .
ihat ' s wt1y rl ' ':i a good.
tdea to consult an In
dept.• nd.:-n t
tn s uranc c
.lg en l
An Independent
agent d ol's not work lor a n
1nsurance compan y. H e
works tor you . Wt1ich
me.1n s he can pl.1n tn e
covrrage t hat •prot e-cf S you
best A nd then plac e 11 With
th e mo s t s u•table of the
s~:"ve ral •nsu·rance com ·
p&lt;~ n • cs h (' deals W't th .
Many peop le make th e
Costly mtStilke o f assum 1n9
t hat 1nsurance p o hct es are
· all tt1c sa m e Th e tr u t h LS.
t heY ar e no r Not .o nty does

with 1
\

"[ was not upset with the
Knicks ," he said softly. " lt
was a perfect marriage for
us. They got two titles and [
got fortWle and fame."
Frazier, the. cool cat who
led Southern lllinois to t.he
Na ti onai
In v i tation
Townam.ent championship i.n
1967 and then spearheaded
the Kn ic ks to National
Basketball Associapon titles
in 1970 and 1973, feels a
change of uniform "is a new

~

I

{
l

'
•
\
•
~

I

I
I)

~hilery ~::~tvpol~cjY t'0°~~~;c~~.
but th e cost ofll'n vari eS
too&lt;.
R emem b er that prtce 1s

not

the

~

only

bas1S

ior

,

II

- ~--- -- --

,.

·~

__

$1 89

ROLlED &amp; TIED

$169

LB.

•

RUMP ROAST

PORTERHOUSE
STEAK

'

"

0~

~
•

~

Wednesday , October 19

1
I
1\

-- ------ -!' M~ IGS co.
....... __

Lit1le Hocking Elemenlar y School

7 :00p .m.

''
'
I............
__

~

·1
~

. ~,'?-·
Great·Bend Site

\

FRESH

6"

.J.'~

NEW

~.-.,;

"'"'

1
~·

CABBAGE

_...r

MARKY

for

CORNER MILL. &amp; SECON.O ST.
MIDDLEPORT, O :

SUPERMARKET
OPEN DAILY .9 tO 10
SUNDAY 10 TO 10
We Accept Federal Food Stamps
We Reserve the RiQht t'o Limit Quantities

"·1

,.

FLAMING REO

TOKAY
GRAPES

CASH SAVER
FRESH &amp; LEAN

..

CHUCK

MINUTE
STEAKS
¢
HAM
SALAD
LB.

.5 LB. OR
MORE

LB.

6'9¢

.

LB.

GROUND
ROUND

"'.~

LB.

SAUSAGE

DIET RITE
8-16 oz. Bottles

LARGE DOZEN
EGGS............••.

RC

COLA

8.;...16 oz. Bottles
'

'

BAGGIES

HEm

TRASH CAN

2o d

$ 99-

Ll NERS ...... ~~~; ••...

MEAT &amp; GRAVY, SLICED PORK,
SALISBURY STEAK,
OR MEAT LOAF•• .l.2Y~.~~.~~~.

69¢

.

2% MILK
_

GIANT

I&gt;

25 CT. BOX

NO. 755
3 LB. CAN ·

W/C

.

' "

"

. . ' "

"

~-:--.-,--; ~~-:--;-.~ ~
'!~

~: . :

.

.

NO. 105

GAU.ON

16

BROUGHTON'S
SWISS SUNDAE STYLE

.

CAN

W/C

:

COUPON

..

'"
I
----

~

.
--

NO. 205
33 oz. btl.

• '

'

'

"'"--;--:-' -7-:--.-:-~7'1 :

5 LB. BAG

W/C

Coupon Expires Oct. 15,1977
Twin City Gateway

25

~-;'- . • · · •

, ~ . . . . . . . , ·\

' 'I

79¢

.:
.

~:~P:~XExpires

· · · • . . · .. ·~

GOlDEN ISLE

~;}

W/C
'"-' ., - -

Oc;, 15,19; ;&lt;';;:.:

: ::, :1
·. ·I
·;:.· :

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PEANUT aunER : :t,

·

$}49

2% LB.

~: I·

~:pon

' "

- ~ ------· - ~-~-

,

~ _:;.__~
'

.

69¢

...

....
· · · · ~

--""----=-.___ ':£.._.-

'

· · · ·

'

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' = -=-'-"-- ..... ,.____ ~- 1 ~-- '" .
'
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Expires Oct, 15,1977

~I
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~I 11· :

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:-' I ~· :
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'- -·~ ..:__' ; •__: _:_ .:. .:__ ·.._;. ~_:._ 1

-

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24 OZ. btl.

.
· ·. ·

--- ........ ~~
'

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.

'

: :1 { :

. GOLDEN GRIDDLE

·:

V-1/C .

,

'

· · · · ·

.

::r

,gg¢

.:

KEEBLER

l,
~'
-~

ZESTA CRAC~ERS
NO.l05
POUND BOX

39¢

W/C

Coupon Expires Oct. 15· 1977

..'

j

II' '
.1

•

~-

,~

'

NI~GARA

· 'I

4·9¢

COUPON

TIDE
SOAP POWDER

FAMILY SIZE
·1 I. .
I :
BOX
I I. .
Coupon Expires0ct.l5,1977
Coupon Expires Oct. 15, 1977
I C•
~
.
Twin City Gateway
.
Twin City Gateway
· . -l
.
............
.
.
.
_._......................
. . ......
.. ' ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . •I

· :t C·.
: ·1 1- :

• • • • ' ' " ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' ' • ' ' ' " ' '..,;.....,r.
=szs:s
-.:::----,...,---- - - --· - - - -- - - ..-. .

.

'

~ · · · · · · · ·, ·I

NO. 205
22 Ol. can

. ·1 1· :
·I

'

SPRAY STARCH ~ ::

:·I I·

. ... ' .. ' .• . ' ' • ' . . . . . . • . '

'

' ),

1

Coupon Expires Oct. 15, 1977
Twin City Gateway

..,_, ...__ _ _ J.....

'

•

1•\\.'

~: ~:: PANCAKE SYRUP :
$: ~::
NO. 125
W/C
:) J·

• • . . • . ' . . • . . . ' •. . ' ' '
' '

~NO. 155

:

~~ :(:
~~ 1
,.'

Coupon Expires Oct. 15, 1977
Twin City Gateway

'

W!C

Coupon Expires Oct. 15, 1977
Twin City Gateway

PRE-soAK

If ·:

:\f:..tw.+;"''f''o,./,~.-,.,.. 1 .

.FABRIC SOFTENER

'

:1;

,_,.~ -~-...

NU SOFT

DETERG ENT. ..• ~.~~z.~ .. 89-~

39¢

NO. 155

j

~.w~n.c~:~.~-at~~.~~·~ - · - ~ .~: J~ t~-~:~·,;· ~-~T=~-~~~:::~.·.: .· .- .~~- J ~~~~~!!T~w~i~n~C~i~ty~G~a~t~e~w~a~y~~e::~~- !~~~;~;;;~:~:~·~;~T;!!i:~C~;~t;~;~a~~~e~~~a~~~~~~~~~~

• ,, , • · · ·

·

ROLL

AX ION

: ·!' 11· .

::upon Expires Oct. IS, 1977

. . . , . .' ....

4 FOR $1

69

39¢

•.

'

~~~

: :1;\.'f

¢

PASTRY FLOUR

JUMBO

'

W!C

. . , ', ' . ', ' . ·-. '-.'. · ~

:. ::. f:

CANNED FROSTING

PAPER TOWELS

ll,

:.·::. ~: :

PILLSBURY ASST.

PILLSBURY

Q~~~~~:!~~~~~!!!~~~f :!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~=~::~~::~

~

. ' . ' . .
• . ·11
~. .a.-:-....~;-:_.;i·~·.~-;:,
WT!+A:+~ . . ~- .

. "• . . . . . .

'

Coupon Expires Oct. 15, 1977
Twin City Gateway

. ' . . ._ .. _... ' ' .

. ' ... ' . . '

'

$899

j

HI-DR I

I'

coFnE

Coupon Expires Oct. 15,1 977
Twin City Gateway

BOnL~S ·

89~

29¢

NO. 135

'139

YOGURT

MORTON HOUSE

TRE~D .,

79¢

MAXWELL HOUSE

'

COU PON

COUPON

COYPON ·

FOOD STO.RAGE BAGS

BROUGHTON'S

09

COUPON

I ..

liz GALLON

COLD
REG_ $
'209
T"ESLETS...•.. :••....

ONLY

...... ..

HOMO ·MILK

CONTAC

PRICE

LB.

.

GRADE B

'49¢

$139

BROUGHTON'S

HOMEMADE
PURE PORK

ALL WEEK

THURSDAY

-TWIN PAK
GALLON

LB.

79¢

VALLEY BELL

2% MILK

$}09

SUPERIOR
All MEAT

'99¢

8-16 oz.

with values

ZERO, MILKSHAKE, BUTTERNUT, PAYDAY

WIENERS

DR. PEPPER

NI'RI LOADID

FRESH &amp; LEAN

GROUND BEEF
HOMEMADE · ·

09

DOG
25 LB.$
FOOD.... ~ ....~~~.....

GROUND

19

CUBE STEAK

BONELESS

FLAVORFUL

...

. - . -- -,.

LEAN &amp; TENDER

T-BONE STE"K
LB.

STEAK
-

.

DELICIOUS

~

Pomeroy

__ ._.._._._..

'
I"
'
'

\

·~

.

,.-

Racine Fire House (3rd . &amp; Vine S1 s.)
7:00p .m .

1

Insurance Service

~---..-..-.

.

Tuesday, October 18

'

@
. '
"7:;.("'!!,"' \

n obo d y can .

TOP FLAVOR

Al l int erested pe rsons are urged to attend .

-~

ROUNI)

TIP STEAK ......·.......... .-.......... ;~·-~1
49
SIRLOIN STEAK....•............ ~~ .. ~ 1

)

agen t on )lO Ur side. l o ~tk for .
th is s ym bo l or co n s ult your
Yell o w Pag es If he can ' t
he lp yo u .

11-1 E . Ma in
992 -5130
_.._.._.,.__. _,_...- ._.._..

\

1

areas .
1 ~ He prov1des th e b es f
1nsuranc e coverage at th e
lowes t t rue cost to you .
1. H e 15 availabl e day and
n• ght to r es p on d ro you r
nee d s .
J . H E' handles all t ypes of
in s uranc e .
a nd
d e als
fhrouqh s t ro n g , r e liab le
co m' pan H?s.
1
T o make s ure you ha ve
a n ind .e pe nd ent 1ns uranc e

" The Insurance Store "

1 lleuter-Brogan

i

..

SALE-

39

Columbus and Southern is interested in and encourages further public involvemeQl
and input before the formal env iron mental study program is comp leted and prepara tion
of an applica t ion begins. Representatives from the Company and the consulting firms hired to
study the environmental and econom ic impacts o f such a plant will be present and
prepared to discus.s t he environmen ta l stud ies.presently underway or co mpleted to date .

I
1
I)

s.elec t 1n 9 your Coverage . A
co mpillt)l 's reputa t io n tor
scrv 1e r
and
cla1ms
paymen t 1S cnt 1ca1.
t.nd d )IOU ha ve a cia 1m .
~· our 1n dc pen d c nt agenl Is
1n ,1 po s 1t 1on t o su pp ort you .
To b e on you r si d e i n
help•ng you ob t;ttn a iust.
_c·q utt a bl e
su tll e m e nt
Prompt ly ,
8 t'CiiU -'!t~ he IS ' ol Se lf ,
e mployed IOC&lt;I I business
man an 1n d c&lt; pend e nt &lt;~gen t
know s h1s res poiH ibi li ty IS
to t1 1s cu'!t t o m crs. H1 s
s uccess 15 ba '&gt;e d o n '&gt;ervmg
his cus tomf'rs in three key

'

SIRLOIN

Athens' Publ ic Library ·
Washington'couhty Library , Belpre and Ma'rietta Branches
Pomeroy Public Library
Jackson County Library , Ravenswood Branch
Parkersburg -Wood County Library

!

.

.

~--ts:--~l2
STEA ~
.................... ~

ROUND

Comple te copies of all the Company' s work Plan and Lener of Inten t are available
for review at the fo llow ing locations:
' '

I

.

BONELESS

.t The primary site IS knol'(n as the Newbu.ry site and is loca ted in Washington
Coun t y near Belpre, Ohio. The alt~rna t e site is in the Great Bend area across the Ohio R1ver
from Ravenswood, West Virginia.

1

lI the
Best Insurance Buy for
..
·
·
. \ Oltr

Columbus and Southern Ohio El ect ri c Company will hold two public meetings
to update area residents o" t he progress ol the Company's environmental study
program and their plans to build tWO 375 megawatt coal fired generating unttS along
the Ohio R1ver . The first un it is proposed to be in service in 1987.
·.

_.~.._,)

Simple facts everyune who
·
business should kn~w

OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

leoav('S.
Springs, a 197-poWld junior
from Williamsburg. Va .. also
was se lected the UPI
Midwest Offensive Player of
the Week .
On defense, end Kelton
D!msler. who intercepted a
pass and had H tackles,
including two for losses. was
seleded the top defensi\·e
player .

I . ow ns a home , car or
I How to Get

__:_._,

OPEN SUNDAY 9 .A.M. TO 6 P.M.

i.Uld rt•(-elved e t ~l1t Uucke_ye

______

.

I

and had a 66--yard
rwt, was -selet•tt'd
tht&gt;o ffensive backoftht&gt; week

--------~---~_,._.__.._..

I~ bargalll
Thl'

j

Anyone

t~1 uchdo wn

another p~lwt.&gt;rhoUSt' OSU
fullback.
scored
four
to uchd(nms. and a two point
con version to take o\·er as the
natit'n ·s le-admg scorer with
50 puints .
Tailback Ron Springs, • ·ho
rushed for 151 yards m 10

___ _ _______

About Proposed Plant Constructio.n

t'~lrries

wto

----

-- - ---c--

NO DEALERS PLEASE!

ru.•rdlng
fur th rr
In·
formation is taskrd to rail
992-3453.
·'
:.:.; ' .·: :-:·:·~·

'"t'

kl't'P ~t'ttmg hun hurt ."
'Lwkl~ Chrts Ward and

•

start for me .."

lli-1yrs.

t1 1

I
I
I
I

Frazier to call it
quits in three years

~;ml

,"

---- -- -

WINS EllS Tll MF.F.T
Distrl\' t rv mpt•titton for
\\lnnrrs In th(' Mt'lgs punt,
pas~ and ki&lt;'k program .. m
b&lt; ht•td l&gt;i'Rinnlng ai 9:30
a .m . thl!ii Saturda)' at th r
Marshall
l'nlvustty
prarlkt• football field a t
Filth A•·r., and 18th St. In

fearful .of Hawkeyes
B) GESE CAOOES
CPI Spurts Writer

·-···:·.-

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.

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6 - Tht&gt; Dall) Sentmt&gt;l, ~hd illeport-P&lt;&gt;m ertl)" . U.. l'ut'sday. Oct. II. 1~77 .

Spofti Transa cf10 ns

llt·ulah rt'suhs

By un11ed Pr ess lntern •flona l
Monda y
Pro Ba stl: etbell

( iHOV I~ ( ' ITY , t)lu u ( UPI )
l.lu) &lt;f s l'hoic.·e woo . the
$8 , 200 allmHtnt·e fei::llur~d
ntfe Monday ut Be ulah Park .
J..:ui n;.: r.Jw sax furl ongs Ill 1: 10

tnd1anA

Bdtv Keller
Nt&gt;w Jersey

double .
1lle tr1~cta mn1binatiun of
7-&gt;-&lt;i returned $1 ,005.90 to 45

ticket holders.
The crowd of 4,345 wagered
$,495 ,51,). '~&gt;

..

rwmer

BY GENE C.~DDES
t;Pl Sports Writer

COLlNBUS 1UP I) - Ron
Spri ngs spe nt the 1976
football season wondering if
he had made a mistake .
Sp rings. a highly touted
junior college transfer when
he enrolled at Ohio SUite,
s pent the

ye ar a s the
:\o. 2 tailback

Bucke1·es'
bchtnd Jeff

Log a n . He

carried the ball only 72 tlmes
for 403 yards.

But Coach Wood)' Hayes
put Logan and the 6-:foot -2,
t9i-pound Springs in the
same b,ackfield this year .
And. with Cogan hobbled by
injuries.
Sprin gs
'has
emerged as the Buckeyes' top
run ner while averaging
neatly 19 carries a game.
In Saturday's ~ romp
o1·er P ur due . · Springs,
playing just o1·er a half .:
ru.she&lt;Lfor !51 yards in only Illattempts. one "'f them a 66rard touchdo wn run .
· Hjs perfo rmance earned
the Williamsbl!'"g, Va , native
thf! honor of United Pres:s
Inlernationa l Midwe s t
Oftensive.PlityCr of tt)e Week .
'1
was
a
little
d !SCO uta I{C d;'" •S p ri'ngs

The Meigs Girls ' Volleyball
team won two matches
recently. raising its season
record to 4-J. Last Thursday
the girls coached by Karen
Walker went to Jackson and
came home the victory in two
out of three games.
. Jackson . took the early
advantage by getting a .15-11
win in the first game, but the
Meigs girls came back in the
second to win going away, l!'r
0. They nailed the victory
down by taking the third
game 15-9.
Junior \'arsity lasses took
an easy two game win, 15-9
and 15-3. In the second game,
Cherrie Lightfoot served 13
straight points to put her tern
over the top.
'Last night the Meigs girls
went above the .500 mark
when they displayed ex. cellent serving and teamwork
to take a three-game match
from visiting Miller. Good
Spikes by Vickie Epple and
Pat Vaughan and eight
straight points by Tonia Ash
led Meigs to a 1:&gt;-9 win in the
first game.
But the Meigs serves fell in
the wrong pla c~s in the
second game as the host fell
15-5. But the local gals got
going in the rubber game and
came away with the win, 15~ .
The JV 's didn't fare as well

as they lost to the visitors in
three games.\ It was an ex-

citing match with excellent
serving, and all three games
were close. Meigs fell in the
opening , game l!'rll before
coming back to take the
second game by an identical

r~c enlly at the home of Mrs.
Eleanor Werry. Business was
L'onducted by the president,
Mildred Arnold. A donation
was made to Naylors Run
Memorial Playground, and a
new member, Judy Werry,
was welcomed into the club.
Secret pal names were
drawn . The traveling p(iZe
was won by. Eileen Bowers.
Games were played with

Coarh Hav'es doesn't make
changes 'Unless you make

mt'stakes and Jeff !Logan I
just didn't ma ke any
mistakes. ··
Htghh· re~ruited after one
~en~ational
vear
at
Coffeyville 1 Kan. ) Junior
College, Springs considered
UCLA and · Nebraska before
dccidin~ on Ohio State. ·
" l did sit and wonder if I
had made the right decision,"
i1e said , "but I know now that
I did."
Is he a better runner now
than a year ago?
"I don't know about that,''
Springs replied. ' 'Being on
the bench makes you a little
rust y. But , I'm gettin g back
to my junior college style and
!,hope as the yea r goes on I'll
ge t better and better."
. "' He!s got .more confiden ce
nnw," said Mickey J ackson,
&lt;•ff•:nsive backfield coac h for
th1 Buckeyes. '· Whf! l he

score. Miller won the match
by scoring a !!'riO win in the
last game.

Next home match is today
against Fort Frye at 5 p:m.
Next league game is Thurs·
day when Meigs hosts
Waverly.
~

111

Engage·m~nt
.
annou'tJW ~. -:
•

as many ways

as BULOVA.
,_

-

Nobodv!
•

Bulova mRkes all ~1nds
of d1g1tals. And all k1nds
nf conv~ntio nal watches .
too , In every price rang e.

• '

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- .......
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-

I

.

'

~

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~

"i

••

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•

Mr. and Mra. E. R.
Chevrier, 171 Shelfl~ld Road,
Columbus, ar~ announcing
the engagement and approaching marrlitge of their
daughter, Sally Marie, to ·
Dennis Lee Weber, son of Mr.
and Mrs.. Vernon Weber,
Rutland.
The bride-elect is a
graduate of Ohio State
UniverSity with a degree in
home economics, class of
1975, and is employed in Columbus" as a records cler.k.
Her fiance gradua ted from
Ohio State University in 1971,
College of Agriculture Food
Technology. and is employed
as a food technologist with
the State Department of Mental Hea lth.
The open ch urch wedding
will be an event of Oct. 22 at
· the Columbia Heights United
Methodist Church in Colwn·
bus.

THE MEIGS PLAZA

U- S 0 -A - CH.OICE

$Is'
STEAK

US 0 A CHOICE

ARM OR ENGLISH ROAST ....... •···• 99•
USDA CHOICE

,

BONELESS CHUCK ROAST ...... , ·~··• 1

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SIZZLEAN ......:.."' ........... ... .. : .. : •:,;· 11"
SWIFT 6 VARIETIE-S

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49

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FISH ...................

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PORK CUBE STEAK .................... Poood 1 15 '
BULK PORK SAUSAGE ............. ''""' 99

PICNIC

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AQUA VELVA .......:";;,, 1 109

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09

SHORT RIBS.OF BUF ...... :.............. 79•

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GROUND CHUCK ........ .............. ····• '1"
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All PURPOSE

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$159

. 2 Varieties BAG 12.5(

APPLES
CRISP TENDER MICHIGAN

CARROTS

2 1-LB. BAGS 43•

YELLOW ONIONS'---- - 3 LBS. 49•
lARGE PASCAL CALIFORNIA .
CELERY_ _ _ _ _ _·--=~

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lesto Apples?

CARNATION

HOT COCOA MIX ....... 'g;:'

BUSH 'SHELLY BEANS ..... ·~.-;:

$1 59

- SHANE ENGLE

291
HALLWOOD CUT YAMS •g.:: 79c
LIBBY PUMPKIN ............... ~~;~· .45

RC

c·tiOCOLATE CHIPS .. ·;;;• 79c

~ 16

OL BOnLES

99~

'

Birthday
observed
I

i

·If you're comparing health care
plans for your company, you should
be aware that although two plans
may look alike, they can still be
quite different. Make sure you're
comparing exactly the same cover·
ages ... dollar for dollar .. . benefit
for benefit ... service .for service.
Otherwise, it's like

\

\.

companng apples to oranges.
Another comparison you should
look at is the balance"between
benefits and cost . .. what you need
versus what you can afford. And,.
it's especially important to make
·sure xou and your employees are
adequately protected from gaps
in your coverage that could Wipe
out a life's saving-s.

I

Mr. and Mrs. Charles
[Pennington entertain ed
''recently wtth a party in honor
lor their son, Shane Engle, on
\his elght1J birthday at their
~me-In Middlepor\. The
:birthday cake was a large
lyeUow bird. The home was
!decorated in colorful balloons
•and streamers.
.
I Games were played during
ithe afternoon with prizes
[being won by Jason Fife, Pete
•Engle Darrin Drenner,
)
.
iJ(enny and Nelson Momson.
:BaUoons candy and bubble
'
' given as favor~. ·
:gum
were
; Alter Shane opened hJs
'many gifts, Mrs. Melissa Fife
and Delores Beech · assisted
Mrs. Pennington in serving
'refreshments of cup cakes,
:tee cream, potato chips and
Kool·Aid to those mentioned
'above and Lori Engle, Jamie
'Pennington. Roger Klein Jr.,
DoMie and Randy Bunce,
'Audria Arnold, Debbie. Engle,
Craig Fife, and his grand·
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
.'Fife.
' !!ending gifts were Jason
.Orenner, Louise, Butch and
:Chris Staats, Mr. and Mrs..
'Robert ·Lipscomb and sons,
'BUly Jeffers, Mr. and Mrs.
:Ronnie Casto and son, Mrs.
Kathryn Miller and his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
W. W. ENgle Sr.

If you're comparing pla·ns, sit down
and talk with a Blue Cross and
Blue Shield representative. See
how your health care program
can be strengthened to better
meet your group's specific needs.
It will be worth the time ... because

apples to apples, it's awfully.
tough for anybody to beat a Blue Ct'Os$
and Blue Shield plan.

.,

Blue Cross
BILle Shield
in CentralOhio

'·

name in time.

•Registered Marks Blue CUI&lt;;S AS~ldittion

' ' Registered Se;Vict' Marks o! The National AsS!Y.iation or Blue Shield Plai
r

POMEROY, OHIO
••

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~~\) SlQII tS . ( MIOINA.IIOOOSTOA ES
'""

X3·11J 4•l:l

PILLSBURY

::..-- RTS FROSTING
lo l"!"t ~" • "" ~ (&lt;lo~ jJOn

""" '"'-• P~~ II" '•"'" '

16 ~.: or

Can

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MIRACLE MAI ZE

CORN MUFFIN Mil·:~·: 39'
AICELANO

·?

' LONG BOTTOM-Mr. and
: Mrs. Terry Congo, the fo,nner
' Elaine Millhoan, Long Bot·
· tom are announcing the birth
1of their first child. The eight
~ pound·, three ounce infant,
· ' born on Sept. 28, has been
· : named Tara Laine.
' Paternal grandparents are
: Mr. and Mrs. Gene Congo,
: Long Bottom, and the greatigrandfather is Clarence. ~ ut1 ter,
Randolph. Maternal
: grapdparents are Mr. and
•Mrs. Blaine Millhoan, Long
' :Bottom, with Mrs. Glenna
: Mlllhoan, also of Long Bottoll"/, a great-grandmother. ·

,

RICE .........................2 ,::; 55'

.

:Daughter born

Goessler's Jewelry Store

FCIDD 8TDA&amp;8

MANDA.RIN ORANGES2 '6;:: 89(

So when you·re 1n th o
market for a. watch, see
us. We'll shew you
precisely what you want
• .. a beautiful wa tch by
Bulova, the dependab le

992-2920

y

~

feels he 's more effective from

Nobody
tells
you
th_
e
time
•

ina I

LOCUST &amp; PEARL STS. - ON THE CORNER • MIDDLEPORT

.

Only one free cervical 6:30a.m. til12 noon and from
cancer clinic for Meigs area I to 5;30 p.m. in the Trinity
women will be held in Or- Church basement, Pomeroy.
Iober but the hours have been There are a number of appointments open for the
extended. . . .
clinic.
~ppointents may be
The one clmtc, mstead of
the usual two , has been set for made by ca]ling 992·5632
Wednesday, October 15, from evenings or weekends.

really needed was a little
more experience reading
defenses. He is a very, very
explosive rwmer and can
break the big one any time. "
Although he has run some
snaps at fullback, Springs

the tailback position .
" I like to be lined up seven
yards deep ," said the long
legged Springs, who has 520
yards rushing yards and four
touchdowns in the Buckeyes'
five games. " I've got good
speed and acceleration and l
"thmk l can get away a little
better.''
With another year to go at
Ohio State, Springs has_set
some lofty, but
not
unattainable goals for
himself.
" I just want to have a good
finish this year and maybe
make someone's all-America
team ," he said. "Then, next
year, be one or the top three .
backs in the country ."
He could be just that.
~~·~==~======~==~

.-·

MON. THRU SAT. 9 AM TO 9 PM
SUNDAY 9 AM TO 9 PM

One clinic planned for October

iJdmtls about his 1976 Season.

-- When I rame in, ~verybody
expected me tO start. But

\

Mrs. Werry hosts club

players identifiable by number , are Marcia Holcomb 3,
Tonia Ash 19, Tracy Burdette 32, Pat Vaughan ll, Sonia
Ash 15 and Vickie Epple 24.

volleyhall record up to 4 and 3

....

STORE

· The Friendly Neighbors
Club of Pomeroy met

Springs
top Buck

waived guard
tenter Rober t

''Ministry to ~Per~ns in the Seminar lhould CGntact
Crisis'' will be the central the Reverend Arthur C. Lund,
\
theme of a Seminar for area Director of Chaplaincy
Detroit
Selected wl n2er clergy sponsored by the Services at the Holzer
Pavl Woods from Mon t re~l in
Holzer Medical Center Medical Center by caUina
The N HL w a1ver draft
Wash•ng&lt;lon
SPi f"C ted Volunte e r
Chaplains 446-5153. The colt lor the
w.ngf" r
Dave
For bes fro m ASsociation , arranged by the seminar i.s ~. which Includes
Boston m the N HL WC'l iver
Continuin g Education coffee and the lunchecin.
drat t
New' York J;~angers
Se lec t
Committee ..
,
ed qoahe Wayne Ttlomas fr om
James
E.
Levernier,
M.D.,
Toron to .n the NH L wa iver
draft
wiU join an array of speakers
,
Pro Football
KEVIN LOGAN
P•llsburgh
Reacti11a ted including other physicians,
LOCATED IN
quar terbac k Neal Gr all
nurses and chap lains who will
HO~RS
TURNS ONE-The first bir·
Sea ttle
Ha d del f"ns!v e end speak on basic crisis in·
NIGHT AT 'DIE OPERA
thday of Kevin Logan, son of
Horace Jont&gt;s r eass1gned to
NEW YORK (UP!) -Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Ron Logan, was
Seallle . w aiv ed de fensive end tervention skills, the surgical
Andy Dorris.
'
observed recently at the
crisis, the crisis of a stroke of Walter Mondale atterxled the
heart attack an&lt;t-crise~ in· qJening-. of~ the-Melropollltlon-.,~-+-hlmi' ly's-Middleporthomr·,..- - -1
volving children.
.
Opera's 93rd season Monday
Cak~punch an&lt;!M;e cream
L-------~----------1
GROCERY CARRY OUT
were served to Kevin's
This Seminar, open to all night, and saw a perfonnance
prizes awarded to El s ie area clergy, is scheduled of Mussorgsky's "Boris
.brother, Darin, Mrs. William
Hines, Eileen Bowers and from 9 u.nL until 3 p.m. on Godunov."
· ,, ..
Alii!, Meri Ault, Mrs. Celesta
Mildred Arnold.
Tuesday, October 16, in the
Later she made a vlalt back
Bush, sons. Greg, Nick and
Other members attending French Five Hundred Room stage
to
congratulate
Jason, Mr. and Mrs. Howard
were
Lucretia
Smith, at the hospital. Reservations debutante mezzo soprano
Logan, Barbara Logan. Sen·
Elizabeth Well, Janet Venoy, are due tomorrow (Oct. 12). Florence
Qulvar
of ·
ding gifts were Mr. and Mrs.
Pat McKnight. and Vera
Any area clergy wWUng to Philadelphia·, who safll! the 1
Archie Gibson and daughters,
Buchanan, guest. Debbie make a reservation to attend role of Marina.
.Charles wills.
Werry.
:• ', •\\--:(•
Refreshments were served,
USOACHOICE
'
$ Jt
sandwiches, salad, coffee and
~--·~
RIB STEAK ................. ......... ......... Poood 1 .
BEEF CUBE STEAK ...................... '"""'
candies. The next meeting
USDA CHO ICE
will be at home of Mildred
SIRLOIN TIP STEAK OR ROAST.""' 1 5' BONELESS BEEF STEW ... .. ... Po ood 11n
Arnold.

Ol.yrnpit· Circuit was third.
Rob N.B. and Princess
Dagnbcrt won the fir st tw()
raees to return $43 on the 5-4
combtrwtion in t hr d a ily

I'Ol..LF:V.BA!.L ACTION - ' l\1eigs High girls
volle&gt;·ball re&lt;'ord went to 4-3 011 the season Monday
en·ning at Meigs wtth a \iCtory ov~r Miller, in two out of
three games. Scores were I:&gt;-9 . :&gt;-15 and !!Hi. Left to right.

Quard

Ke\ltn Clue.ss ~nd
Elmort'
Hock ey
Bu ffa lo
Asstg ned winger
Joe Kowal to Hershey ( AH Ll

1-5 f,, . j&lt;&gt;:k,•y R.J . Myers.
U &lt;~y d 's Chok e defeat ed
Wa i lin ~i n t he win ~s by one
and onequarter length)

'I

Wai\II'CI

Levernier to address
clergy and crisis seminar

7- The Dally S&lt;!ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., 'l'uesday , Oct. 11 , 1977

CAMPBElLS

TOMATO I

Umil th1ee with coupon end 110.00 purchn.e

excl1.1ding beer. wine 1nd cigi!OUet

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CHILi'sEASONING .. :;;;· 25'

SUNSHINE CRACKERS .. ·:~:· 49'

ciili.i'wnH BEANS ..... '~;".: 49'

LUNCH PACK

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9 LIVES CAT FOOD ... ..4•;;~;

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DETERGENT

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CA.Il OINAl\J

�BALLOT LANGUAGE EXPLANATION ARGUMENTS AND
RESOLUTION FOR AMENDMENT TO THE OHIO
CONSTITUTION PROPOSED BY THE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY TO BE SUBMITTED TO THE VOTERS AT
THE GENERAL ELECTION NOVEMBER 8 1917

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer

PROPOSED AMEN OM ENT
to THE OHIO CONSTITUTION
3

PROPOo,ED CONSTI TUTIONAL AMEND~!EN1
T

'

le \ lli f I e Co s
t o of 0 o
b
dopt g S ct a 14
TO AUTHORIZE THB11'?ATE TO LEND ITS AID AND CREDIT
TO INDIVIDUALS ASSOCIATIONS COMPANIES OR COR
PORATIONS TO BORROW MONEY AND ISSUE BONDS OR
NOTES TO PROVIDE FOR HOUSING AND THE REHABILITA
TION OF HOUSING AND TO MAKE DIRECT LOANS FOR LOW
AND MODERATE INCOME HOUSING
2 TO AUTHORIZE MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS AND COUNTIES
IN THE ABSENCE OF LAWS PASSED BY THE GENERAL AS
SEMBLY TO THE CONTRARY TO DO THE SAME AS PARA
GRAPH I ABOVE
3 TO VALIDATE AND RATIFY THE BOND AUTHORITY OF SUB
STITUTE HOUSE BILL NO 870 OF THE !lOTH GENERAL AS
SEMBLY
(Propo a b Resol o of 1 e Ge e al \ssen bl) of Oh o)
a ~ o e 1s ec ssa j f o p ssage
-\ n aJon I) aft
1

Tangled telephone cord
PQ! I Y S PROBLEM

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1E ( I nor C
s A V n Meter

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FULL TEXT OF THE RESOLUTION PROPOSING
THE AMENDMENT

\ES
SH-\LL THE PROPOSED AMENDME!\ l
BE ADOP1E D
NO

EXPLANATION OF ISSUE No 3
The Canst tu on p ese t ) p o de
at the cred t of the s a e cannot
be gl en o caned except n a lim ed an e Th s an endmen t ~au ld
c ea e add ona l au ho j for sate
un c pal at d coun y go e nmenb
to o n o g e c ed as fa lo
1 By au ho z ng the state to le d ts a d a d c ed t to md v duals
assoc at ons con pan es or co po at ons to borro v money and ssue
bonds or notes to prov de fa ho s ng and he ehab tat on of hous
ng and to make d ect loans for 1o and moderate come hous ng
2 B~ au hor zmg n un c pal co porat ons and co nt es
the absence
of la s passed b) he General A.ssemb) o he contra v to do th e
same as parag "ph I abo e
3 Bv val da ng a nd at fy ng the bond author t;, of Subs! tute House
B 11 No 870 of he I!Oth Ge e a Assembl)
Mane) s nused by ax at on cannot be obi gated or pledged fot the pay
tnen of bonds o other obi gat ons ssued b) 1 e state or to secure th e
gJ.V ng or oan ng of the s ate s c ed
Howe e the Gene al Assemb )
could app op ate rnone)S mto a reser e fund o be used to retlre the bonds
or to secu e the state:&gt; obi gat ons n h s espec Bonds vh ch the sate
ssues vould have to be re enue bonds o supported by a specLal reserve
fund to vh ch the state had approp a ed none) s nee moneys a sed by
taxa! on cannot be obllga ed or p edged for the payment of such bonds or
other obi gat ons
Mumc pal corporat ons nnd count es n the absence of la vs to the con
trary can borro v mane) ssue bonds or notes and g ve and lend the r
credit to pro de for hous ng and h ous ng rehabt l tat on These gave n
mental enh es can also n ake d rect loa ns for lov. and madera e neon e
hous ng to the extent ha such loans do not contravene Ia vs enacted by
the General Assembl)
Under ex st ng la v mun c pal corporat ons and met opohtan hous ng
au tho es a e au ho zed to !:_onstruct and operate publ c hous ng facti ties
A muruc pa corporat on und~F s nherent home rule powers has author
tty to rna nta n publ c hous ng Under the authont) of the proposed
amendment (ne v Sec on 14) the mun c pal co porat on or any county
vou d be authoriZed o bo o v mane:, and ssue general .filigatwn bonds
or notes and g ve or lend s c ed t to md v duals corporat ons or assoc a
tons to pro de for pub c hous ng or for the rehab l tall on of hou&gt; ng The
borrow ng of ma ne~ o end ng of atd or c ed t by a mun c pal corporat on
or county vould not be subJect to the I mttat ons present n Sect ons 6 or
11 of Arttcle XVIII of the Canst tut on Ho vever they wou d be su bject
to the l m ta on? upon ndebtedness vh ch are other v se prov ded by law
and spec fica! ) to the cur en! debt l m tat ons on mun c pal COfpornt ons
and count es found m Chap er 133 of the Oh o Rev sed Code
The proposed amendment prov des that the &lt;'ndmg of a d or c ed t JS not
sub eel to the 1 m tat ons o! othef sec ons of Art c e VIII or of Sect ons 6
and 11 of Art cle XII of the Oh o Canst tu t on
Amended Subst tute House B ll No 870 enacted n 1974 by the l!Oth
G neral As en bl:, s validated b y he amendmen That b ll authoriZed
the Oh o Hous ng Developm en t Au hor ty o sell tax f ee bonds and notes
to p ov de financ al a d to pn ate persons and assoc at ons for the rehab l
ta on and construct on of hous ng for low and moderate neon e persons
The Supreme Court held n 976 that the ssuance of revenue bonds by the
Oh o Hous ng D"'elopment Au h o r ty was not p oper under the ConstJtu
bon and th at the enactment of Amended Subs tute House Bill No 870 d d
not qualifv as a a l d exerc se of leg slat ve power Consequently the
adopt on of ne v Sec on 14 vould elm nate the Const tut onal defects n
Amended Subs tute Ho se B 1 No 870 and al date that 1974 enactment
b y the Gene al Assembly
ARGUMENTS FOR THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
Oh10 s o t zens a e ent ted to I ve n decent hous ng Yet v th sky
rocket ng nte est rates fe ver vo k ng people can afford to buy theJ r own
1 ames o o cnt safe sou nd apa tments Fewer rettred persons and
othe s on fixed ncomes can afford to rna nta n adequate hous ng
Issue 3 w 11 rev ta ze the hous ng ndustry n Oh o It should prov de
many of the 100 000 un ts needed o e the next few years by freemg up
home canst uct on money a educed nteres t rates More people w 11 be
ab e to afford the r o vn homes
It w ll help edu ce bl ght p eserv ng ne ghborhoods before the) can
become slums
It Will encourage rehab 1 tat on of ex st ng hous ng promo! ng mo e
attract ve ne ghbor hoods and better use of energy
It wtll enable Oh o to use ts entre share of federal hou s ng dollars
It w ll complement hous ng programs prov ded through convent anal
loans lower ng nterest rates for all
And t v ll create obs and put tho sands of people to wo k
HOW WILL IT WORK?
Tax free bonds fa hous g could be sol d at ates 2 to 4 v ower than
bonds offe ed a t regula nterest rates
Over the course of a 30 year $45 000 m ortgage a 4 v reduchon on int•erest amoun s to $34 500 o a $96 sav ngs each mon th
The pro ects voutd b ~ self oUPP-O'I ng oom ng from the sale of or rent
from the hous ng Th rty n ne states already run such p og rams
The A r Qual ty and Water De elopment Authont es h6ve opera ed
s mtlar programs n Oh o fo yea rs at no cost to the taxpayer
CONCLUSION
Hous ng p oblems are not hm1 ted to the poo r The ave
new h ome s $48 000 and r s ng rap dly Th s hreatens to w
and old al kc t he Arne can Dream of own ng a home
OHIO NEEDS ISSUE 3!
Comm ttee for I e Amendment

Edward F Fe ghan Kenneth R Cox
M ke S nz ana 0 k ey C Coil ns

ARGUMENTS AGAINST THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
Th s Const tul onal proposal would create a Jumbo state agency w1th
author ty to •ell unl mt ed m lh ons of do a s of revenue bonds and then
make d eot loans to nd v dua ls e en th o gh ex per ence n other st ates
has been d sastrous for some s m a p og ams
The appropr ate wa y to reahze au hous ng need s s to wo k through
trad t anal lenders not another la) er of governme nt burea ucra cy wh ch
first needs to be put nto pace and hen w I ha e to develop en expertJs
to match tts respons b htt es
Th s proposed amendment o our Cons nu on vo ld allow an undetc
mmed m ll ons of d olla s of bonds to be ssu e I and would hen a! ow thJS
huge state agen,cy to make loa ns d eel y o nd duals as we I a s com
pantes and assoctallons Those lavl&gt;'ted b c ec on fo r lo ns a e the eby

BALLOt- LANGUAGE EXPLANATION, ARGUMENTS AND
RESOLUTION FOR AMENDMENT TO THE OHIO
CONSTITUTION PROPOSED BY THE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY TO BE SUBMITTED TO THE VOTERS AT
THE GENERAL ELECTION NOVEMBER 8, 1977

DEAR POll Y I wm d&lt;r
if 11 y reader could tell 11e
how to keep ny 25 foot lo g
te!eph01 e cord frm 1 gettmg
tangled DOH01 HY
DEAR OOR01 HY 1 an
sure many readers w I be
tell ng you how the) solved
this problen h the mean
while why not w nd t nto
long loops about a foot lo g
and l old tl e 1 togelher w t1 a
rubber band Tl e ba d em be
eas ly shpped off if the lot ger
cord IS needed at a y t n e
PO!JY
DEAR POLLY
M~
Po ter s for others who ""'Y
have
adorabl e
but
JruSCh evous cats I think I
have a ruce protection for my
cat when I go out There IS a
day bed m n y large rwnpus
room l have fastened
chi ken w re aU around the
bolla n of the bed w1th a door
entrance that shuts and IS
secure so the cat JS com
fortably coni ned whenev er I
have to go out for a whi e I
put water a d w]Jatever else
he needs rnstde and when I

come home the roo n 1s u

TED W BROWN
St&gt;c a )I f S ate

tact -GEORGE
DEAR POLLY - I want to
tell Mrs A K how to make a
totehag from plastic bottles I
make them all lhe tune and
atn workmg on one now
Cut three mch squares
from the plastiC cartons tt
will take 24 to make a bag
For a larger bag use fou
mch squares Punch holes a!
aroWld the outs de or each
square and the 1 s ngle
croohet m each hole w th
yarn PWlch a ho e m the
center of each squa e a d

work )arn Iron oub de holes
to c~1 tcr hole to ake a sort
~ sunburst effect
Sew
!&lt;JU res tog ell er
thrL'CS
Have me squa es on each
s de of the bag a d three 01
ea I e1 d Usc o e large
rou d plasl c bolt e Ike a
bl ach bottle to nake the lop
1 01 e t make ll e handle
Pu h I oles around the out
stde a 1d s1 gle crochet
aroWld ThCJ se" the stdes to
ll e botton wtt yarn at d
t e1 sew tl e el!ls Cut handle
f o bottle a 1sew 01 1 hen
lellcbag MRS EC
DEAR POLLY S n e both
coffee and electr ctty are so
higl these days I use my lher
os bottle to keep coffee for
lu d rather than makmg
!rest I brew en ough coffee
for both breakfast a d lu 1ch
After breakfast I pour wl at 1s
left nto the them as so t 1s
hot for lunch We are ret rees
trymg to stretch every dollar
and think th s saves n two
ways ..{)LGA
DEAR POLLY
I I ave
three gold cha n choker type
necklaces that I like to wear
but everyt me I wear them
my ha r gets caught It s
t1ne conswrung to try to get
the hat rs out of these
necklaces Now I light a
natch touch the hatrs to
bur then off and then run
m) hand do~ ll e e gth of
tl e cham It s clean and
ready to wear aga n
DIXIE
Polly w II se d you one of
h
s gned thank you
ne\\ spaper cuupo I ppers if

sl e uses }our

POinter Peeve or Problem m
I e colwnn Wnte POLl Y S
PO N I ERS n care of this
ewspaper

* ~::: .e::::eo:o:!O'~:~t

Social Two showers hosted Lewrt Falls UMW
Calendar for Crystal Hall
Two showers were held
rl'Cently honormg Crystal
Hall whose marr age to Randy Lee was an event of Fn
day n ght at the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church
Mrs Brenda Wyatt hosted
one shower at her Mulberry
Ave home whi e Trudy Hall
asststed b) Mrs Conn e
Hvsell enterta ned w th
another
A p nk and whtte color
scheme wtth weddmg bells
was carr ed out for the
shower giVen b:, Mrs Wyatt
The heart shaped cake was
nscrtbed
Best Wtshes
Cyrstal and Randy Games
were played wtth pr zes gomg
to Velvet Sw sher Trudy
Hall Mrs Jean Wr ght and
RobmVenoy
Others attending were Mrs
Betty Reed Mrs Edith Bar
ton Mrs Patty Barton Judy
Hall Mrs Judy Harr son
Mrs Lorrame Venoy Mrs
Ne ha Sey er Mrs Kay

H A R R !S'"(J N V I L L E

lAUREL CUFF BE TIER
HEALTH CLUB Thursday
6 3Q potluck d nncr at the
home of Mrs Amber Lohn
Forty ftrst anruversary of the
club to be celebrated Sun
shine s sters to be revealed
w th a gtft exchange

Chapter OES g p m Tues
day at the temple There w II
be elect on of pff cers and all
members are requested to at
tend
MEIGS COUNTY Pamona
Juruor Grange Tuesday 7 30
p m at fa1r board buildmg
All members brmg $2 dues
MEIGS CHAPTER 53
DAV meetmg 7 30 p m
Tuesday at the hall onf
Butternut Ave Pomeroy
WEDNESDAY
WHITE ROSE LODGE
I 30 p m Wednesday at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electnc Co soc al room A I
members are urged to attend
MIDDLEPORT
AMATEUR GARDENERS 6
p m Wednesday at the home
of Mrs Ferman Moore M
Harry Moore Mtss Kathryn
Hysell and Mrs C E
Blakes ee wtll be co
hostesses Members are to
take guests
POMEROY
MID
DLEPORT L ons Club lun
cheon at Me gs Inn 12 noon
wtth D str ct Governor
possibly to be n atten la n e

THURSDAY
CARD PARTY at the
Sacred Heart Catholic
Church basement Thursday
7 30 p m wtth t ckets at $2

FRIDAY
INSTALLATION OF of
f cers of subordmate granges
to take place at 7 30 p m Fr
day at the Roc~ Sprmgs
Grange Hall All subordmate
off cers mv1ted
HAPPY HARVESTERS
CLASS of Tr n ty Church
7 30 p m Fr day at the chur
ch
BAKE SALE by the Aux
iltary of Veterans Memor al
Hasp tal the EMS bu ld ng
back uf the husp tal Sale to
start at 9 am There w II also
be Items from he gtfl shop
and homemade soup for sale
FRENCH Colony DAR w II
meet wtth the Pomeroy
Chapter Return Jonathan
Metgs at the home of Mrs
Pau E ch n Pomeroy at 1 30
pm

and Ptck the Da s es
Dur n g the bu s tn ess
meet ng t was announced
that 36 sl ut n cal s had bt.-en
nade The p ogram was a
discusSion
on br ngmg up
Rupe Mrs T na Stewart
dren
Mrs
Ernest Shuler
chi
Mrs Donna G !more Mrs
IS
cha
rman
of
B ble studies
Beo Stewart Mrs Evelyn
the
next
meet ng w II
and
al
Murray Mrs Mary Pickens
lead n the d scuss on of the.
Lort Wyne Cheryl Kennedy
book of Matthew
Deanna Denny Debbte Hat
Off cers of the Athens
f e1d J uhe Kttchen Rtta
D str ct from the local unt!
Hayman She la Powell
announced at the meet ng are
Laura Horsley Br an Denny
Mrs
Gla,dys Sh elds
and Adam Wyatt
cha rperson o mruttee on
Send ng gifts were Mrs
non nat ons Mrs Bell
Jean Roberts Mrs Htlda
secretary
of prog ram
McDamels
Mrs
Carol
resources
Mrs
John H ll
Hayman
Mrs
Dtane
coordmator
for
Chr
st an per
Fredertck Mrs Marsha
ez
Htll
coor
sonhood
Mrs
l
Ho\ldashelt Mrs Myrtle
for
supporatJVe
com
dinator
Grover Mrs Linda Grover
un
ty
Mrs
AI
ce
Balser
Mrs Hope Eblm Mrs Ilene
coord nator for Chnsttan
Hall Mrs N ta Conde Mrs
soctal
nvolvement
Mrs
Gmny Hubbard Beth TheiSS
Roush
coord
ator
Harold
Ray Ptckens III Debb e
Chr
st
an
globa
con
for
Thayer Melame Surunons
cerns Mrs Andrew Cross
Mrs Dmah Stewart Mrs
cha rperson for membership
Caro Kennedy Jayne Hut
Mrs Bert Gr mm pub! c
ellison Mrs Peggy-Bush
relat ons hiStonan
Mrs Carolyn Ohlmger and
Next meetmg w l be wtth
Debb e Miller
Mrs John H ll and Mr~ Bell
For the shower held at the
w II have the program The
hall home m Middleport a
hostess served refrestunents
b ue and white color scheme
assiSted by Lorna Bell and
was carrted out with the
"''··-·-------Nancy Cross
decorated cake nscrtbed
Best Wtshes Crystal and Mrs V1cky Metheny and
Randy bemg served w th Ricky Metheny
The honored guest also
nunts pWtch and coffee
Games were played with rece ved gifts from James E
pnzes gomg to Mrs Sherry Hall Mr arid Mrs Jay Hall
Neutzhng
Mrs
Drema Sr Mr and Mrs R1chard
Smith Judy Hall Also atten Neal Mr and Mrs Jay Hall
ding were Mrs Betty Reed Jr Penny Hall Mr and Mrs
Nat anal Bus ness and ProMrs Ilene Hall Mary Fetty Robert Brush Mrs Wanda
Mrs Phyliss Cadle Cheryl Ebl n Mrs Debbie Dodr ll fessiOnal Women s Week w ll
Kennedy Lon Wyne Judy Charlotte Edwards !Vlrs be observed Oct 16 23 by the
Carroll Sandi Hamilton Dar Norma Wtlson Mr and Mrs Middleport Club
The week Will begm by at
cre Hysell Tma Neutzl ng Lawrence Seymour Mr and
Mrs
Ken
McCullough
and
tending
the 10 a m Mass SWl
Margaret Provmce Deanna
day at the Sacred Heart
Knapp Mrs Pam Colwell Mr and Mrs Lenny f yons
Cathol c Church w th Janel
Korn Cather ne Welsh Mary
KWtzelman Loretta Saelens
Juaruta Conde and Mary
Bacon as hostesses for the
RUTLAND A
brtdal btrds was served w lh punch group
The Oct 17 meet ng w 11 be
shower hononng Sally Mar e m1nts and nuts
ad
nner meetmg at the Metgs
Chevr er bnde-elect of Den
The guest hst mcluded
ms Lee Weber was held those named and Mrs Mar Inn at 6 30 p m With reserva
Saturday rught at the Rutland JOrte Mtlhoan Mae Weber lions to be In by Fr day to
Umted Methodtst Church Margaret B Weber Far1e Terne Walker 742 2377 Wan
soctal room
Cole Naomi Kmg Fane Ken da Ebhn 992 2272 or EloiSe
Hostesses were Donna nedy Jeannette Dav s AI ce W lson 992-362
The program w II be
Weber Margaret Edwards
Young Grace Colwell Mary
Marcia Den son
Donna Colwell Hazel Hilt Edith presented by the leg slatJOn
Wdhamson Janet Moms Williamson Janet Wtlllam committee wtlh Mrs Edith
Forrest n charge Other
and Ruth Erlewme Games son and ElSJe Sutherland
were played wtth prtzes gomg
Sendmg gifts were Ruth members of the comrruttee
to Beulah Jones Rayanna CHevner Pearle Canaday are Mrs Walker Eva RobCole Mrs Will amson Mrs
Jane W se Joann W se Patty son Linda Stob;jrt Mrs
Moms and Mrs Edwards A Clark Catherme Colwell Welsh Rose Reynolds and
peach and whtte color Ann Colwell Iva Howell Luctlle Swackhamer Guest
scheme was earned out m the Pearl Little Mane B1r speaker Will be Richard
decorations wtth the gift table chf eld Fay Sauer Joy Jones Metgs County corrunJS
featuring an umbrella
Sauer Mary Becker Ethel s oner speaking on legtSia
st eamers and bells Behmd Chapman Ann Webster t on n Me gs County
Selecllon of the Woman of
the refreslunent table was the Margaret Parsons Marte
the
Year and the Woman of
SJg Sally and Dennis Oct
Bishop Fern Stansbury
the
Week Will be a htghlight
22 1977 wtth weddmg bells
Rosa! e Nichols and Beth
Of the meetmg
A cake decorated With love Fultz
LETART
FALLS A
rruscellaneous £al1 sale was
planned for Oct 28 from 10
a m to 5 p m at the Letart
Falls CommWl ty Bwlding
when the Un ted MethOd st
Women of the Letart Falls
Church met wtth Mrs Don
Bell
Among the many terns to
be mcluded m the sale wdl be
baked goods dned flower ar
rangements pots of live
plants soup electncal appl ances canned goods and a
large supply of ew wear g
apparel A door pnze w I be
giVen
On conumttees for the sale
are Mrs Bell Mrs Ernest
Shuler Mrs Inez Htll Mrs
John Htll Mrs Harold
Roush Mrs Gladys Sh elds
Mrs AI ce Balser and Mrs
Andrew Cross Lorna Bell
Will have charge of th•
flowers
Devot ons for the meet ng
were gtven by Mrs John Hill
who read from Proverbs 22
wtth her sub] eel bemg Tram
Up a Child wtth an msptra
t anal reading entttled Stop

BPWweek
to fie f?eld

Sally Chevner shower hosted

~

•

4

2

3
4

5

6

PHOPOSED CONSlliUrl0 NAL AMENDMEN1

•

To adopt Sect on 1 of A1t cle VIII and e pea l Sec on
I 2 2b 2c 2d 2e 2f 2g 2h 3 7 9 and 10 of
Art cle Vlll and Sect on 6 of A
le XII of tl e
Canst tut o a! Oh o
TO REPEAL THE GENERAL STATE CONSTITUTIONAL DEBT
LIMIT OF $750 000 AND REPLACE IT WirH AUTHORITY TO IN
CUR DEBT FOR CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS BY A TWO THIRDS
MAJORITY VOTE OF EACH HOUSE OF THE GENERAL ASSEM
BLY WITHIN SPECIFIED LIMITATIONS DIRECTLY RELATED
TO STATE REVENUES
TO PERMIT THE STATE TO CONTRACT DEBT WITHOUT LIM!
TATION ON AMOUNT OR PURPOSE IN ADDITION TO THE
AUTHORITY SPECIFIED ABOVE IF THAT DEBT IS SUBMITTED
TO A VOTE OF THE ELECTORS BY A THREE FIFTHS MAJOR
ITY VOTE OF EACH HOUSE OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY
AND APPROVED BY A MAJORITY OF THE ELECTORS VOTING
ON THE QUESTION
TO REQUIRE THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY TO RETIRE AT LEAST
4% OF THE STATES INDEBTEDNESS EACH YEAR
TO PERMIT THE STATE TO BORROW FUNDS TO MEET A CUR
RENT YEARS APPROPRIATIONS IF ANY SUCH LOAN IS RE
PAID OUT OF THAT YEARS REVENUES
TO REPEAL PART OF THE CONSTITUTIONAL REOUIREMEN1S
RELAtiNG TO A SINKING FUND AND TO REQUIRE THAT THE
GENERAL ASSEMBLY PROVIDE FOR THE REPAYMENT OF
STATE DEBT
TO ENUMERATE PURPOSES AND AMOUNTS FOR WHICH THE
FIRST $640 MILLION OF CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT DEBT
WOULD HAVE TO BE APPROPRIAlED
(Proposed by Resolut on of tl e General Assembly of Ohw)
A maJO ty all ma t ve vote JS nccessru y lo passage

YES

favor tc

Fall sale planned by

TIJESDAY
MEIGS HIGH School
parents
and
teachers
rellll!lded of Tuesday rught
meetmg of PAT the newly
orgaruzed group oi M H S
parents and teachers at 7 30
1&gt; m at high school Gu dance
counselors will be present for
an mforma!Jve program
about the r department Also
PAT memberships $1 each
may be purchased at the
meetmg
HARRISONVILLE
CHAPTER 0 E S Tueda) 8
p m at the temple With all
members asked to attend
There w II be electiOn of of
fleers
BELLES AND Beaus
Western Square Dance Club
wtll host a dance Tuesday
from 6 to II p m m the recrea
t on bu ld ng at Royal Oak
Park F ankie Lane w ll be
the caller All western square
dance club members are m
v ted
WINDING Trail Garden
Club Tuesday 8 p m at the
home of Mrs Maf)ar e
Walburn New officers will be
mst.alled
OHIO ETA Pht Chapter
model meetmg 7 30 p m
Tuesday at Columbus and
Southern OhiO Electr c Co
butld ng hostesses Peggy
Stout and Brenda Baggy

PROPOSED AMENDMENT
TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION.

I

NO

SHALL IHE PROPOSED AMENDMEN 1
BE ADOPT:ED

\

II

JJ S VI

I 01

)C"

3 11

DO I! i\ltAM
CANNO J EX C ~ I
p cc I g t v
r V ~ 1\Y !! SCM
II !U \
4 \
I AS I 4
YE\t
I he adop
0 v g
0
g b
PI\EV EN I EX CI :-;s \
vifl out un l d 1 l
g
2 EXPAND m: Sl \ ES AB L J Y I 0 1301\HOW n t me of
d I n ng E!V nu s
evenu es a n I to d u
n rr
H E CONSll l U I ION w th
3 IREVENT Jli],; ULUJ EH! N( Ul 0
unnc ess y l
n ul d
4 REDUCJO t HE NUM il FR AND EXI ENSE Or STA I EW D E ELEC
IO NS o na to s uf debt
" UPON API ROY AI 01 Ill E ELF CTOHA rE pe m t ong te m bar
ow ng: outs de he i
I
t
u I u po es o he than capt ta l
mp ovem ent s u
l o c en g nc) s tua ons whctc such author ty
presently ex sts
6 PROVIDE OHIO W f
1\ SAV INGS IN IN TERESI COSTS by
efina nc ng sum o s e en e bonds w th gen al ub i g ton bo nds
7 INCREASE lliE rl ~C\L FLEXJJ3 ILTY OF !Hi: SlATE b) per
m tt ng t to bo ow to me et app op at o s vh e equ ng th at all
none) bo
wed fo th s pu pose s cpa d
h
h e f sea l ) Ca
n v. h h t s o owed
s R obe to An hony J
Conn ttee o t c An d c nt Ma
Ce b e e J and George Ta bla k
ARGUMENTS AGAINST THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
Senate Jomt Resolu on #3 w ll set a dangerous p eced e t t1 at could
lead Oh o do" 1 a oad den v th cd nk and nc rea sed taxes
The amendment would e ase a fixed debt l m t that has been part of our
Canst tu on s nee 185! It proposes to repl e I e ur en 1 m t " th a
flex ble debt hat vould be a llowed to soar v th ftuctuat ng 1m tat ons
as lawmakers respond to publ c pressure fu more e x pens ve se rv ces
Leg slators m1 dlul of publ c res stance to new taxes ha e been bound
by the rest ct ve debt m t to the cvenue t ey could ra se n a b e nn al
budge t pe od Senate J o nt Resolu on #3 elm nates h s prov on and
nstead tu ns legJSlato s oose w th our pocketbooks
Not only wtll ve have the ssuance ot more bond s fo
ap La l mprove
ments around the state but th s p oposed amendment a! a vs unl m ted
short term bo row ng to pay state operaI ng exp nses v h n a fiscal
)ear Shoit term bo ow ng aga nst cu ren defic ts may be a con en ent
but certa nly a m sgu ded way t o fo est all nc eased taxes o red uct ons
n serv ces
The federal gove nm ent 1s a constant s uggle to cant ol an expand ng
national debt It has grown to the po n vhere nte est payments on 1.he
$700 b 11 on debt now account lo the th d la gest expendtture of the
fede al government after na anal defense and human resources The
New York Ctty debacle has sh own us I ow frag le a c ed rat ng s when
tl e oudget cant be balanced Oh o JS cur en! y sea l y so nd and must
protect her.elrfrom !a! ng nto suoh a trap
Proponents of the b l say pe centage l m Is v 1 be m el!ect and Oh
through thJS law w l neve fall r e r eveab ly nto debt But ex st ng Ia v
has an absolute lim that msures the tate s seal nteg ty Current la v

_!=:::::::::::-::::==~--'------------------:~.Jm~sures
the
cur deb ts

L

I

CHAPTERS TO MEET
Return Jonathan Chapter
DAR mcetng 130 pm
Frtday at the hon e of Mrs
Paul Etch 162 I ncoln H II
Road Pomeroy Mrs Nelson
Embrey Lancaster D A R
Southeast D str ct Director
wtll be speaker French
Colony D A R Gall pol s
mvtted to ]O n local chapter
for the meetmg

publ o

at legJSlato s are not g an ed blank c ed t ca ds to

Com ~ Aga nst
c Am 1 dmen
M Ben Gae h F ed B Hadl ey
EXPLANATION OF ISSUE No 4
Ala E Nor s Thonas A
Canst tut onal prov sons cu entl) m e!Iect proh btt he state from bo
Van Mete
rowmg more than $750 000 A 1 umber of ex epl ons to tl s hm ta wn a te
now m the Const1 ut on
G
FULL TEXT OF THE RESOLUTION PROPOSING
This proposed Canst tuttonal ame ndment provtdes for rev sed l m at o ns
upon state 1ndebted ess fhe ptoposed amend nent author zes the Gene a
THE AMENDMENT
Assembly by t vo th rds concUirence of each house to cant ac debt fot
ISSUE .t.
oapttal Improvements by the state or to provtde funds to local govern
mental ent ties for such purposes w th n he hm tat ons th at payments
on the states total outstandmg debt sha 1 not exceed 6
of the states
annual revenues and debt contracted n a y t seal yea shall not exceed 8
of the total revenue that JS subject to the General Asscmb y s app op a
uons
The General Assembly JS requ ted to prov de for the et ement ol at
least 4% of the states outstandmg mdebtedness each year and prOvide the
method procedures and app opu at ons for ncutr ng ev denc ng refund
mg and retinng of state debts
I he amendment proVldes adddt anal authonty fa general obligatiOn n
debtedness for cap tal unprovement or other purpo ses whtch may be con
traded by a thtee fifths ma)o 1ty concunence of each house of the
General Assembly 1f t JS further approved by the vote s Indebtedness
mcurred 1n this manner would not be subJect to 1 mttat ons as to s ze or
purpose or be mcluded n the requtrement to ret re at least 4r, of the
pr ncr pal debt each fiscal year
'I he amendment prov des that the state may contract debt du ng any
fiscal year to meet app opnattons of the General Assembly for such fiscal
year if such debt IS repa d p wr to the end of the fiscal year f om s late
revenues other than bo owed funds
If the General Assembly should fa l to p ov de the requ red appropna
IJons the Treasure! of State shall set as de moneys f1 om the General
Revenue Fund to prov de for the lull and
ely pa;ment of p nc pal
and mterest on all state debts
The Treasurer of State would be requ red to determme and certtfy the
annual prmc pal and nlerest payments on outslandmg debts the annual
revenues that serve as the bas s lor determ n ng the debt I m tatwns and
any other financ al data necessary for determ rung the l m tatwns on
borrowmg author ty or the amounts of pr nc pal to be ret ed The
Treasurers determ na on would be concluSive for the pu poses of th s
amendment
The amendment would establish the m n mum amounts wh ch shall be
appropnated for vanous purposes from th e proceeds of bonds or notes
authonzed under the cap tal tmp ovement provJS ons of th s amendment
as follows
(1) $80 mtll on fo r state office butldmgs mclud ng et rement of bond s
and notes of the Ohw Bu ld ng Author ty
(2) $8 mtlhon for energy research or demons\ at on proJects
(3) $200 m 11 on for transpo tatwn at least one hall of wh ch shall be
for roads and bndges mamtruned by count es townsh ps and
mu.n c pahl es
(4) $64 mt!lion for mental health and retardatwn fact! t es
(5) $80 m Ilion for correct anal mstttut ons
(6) $80 m !lion for parks and recreatton
(7) $35 rrulhon for water development
(8) $43 m !lion for h gher educatwn
(9) $30 m 11lian ior elementary and se omla y educat on scl ol
bulldmg modermzatwn or replacement
(10) $20 m !lion for the multi pu pose semor ctttzens center
An amount not exceedmg I5 7&lt; of the total amounts enumerated above
may be expended for any one of the above enumerated put poses or for
any other purpose w thou\ all of the requtred appropr at ons for capt tal
Improvements hav ng been made
The amendment p ov des for the repeal of the follow ng present Con
stltutwnal provtswns
Arhde VIII Sect on 1-Impos ng a $750 000 1 m tat on upon state m
debtedness
f
h
Arttde VIII Sect on 2- The aut! onty for the state to bmrow or I e
suppresston of nsurrecbon or to defend the state n wartime IS trans
ferred from Sect on 2 to Sect on 1 and Section 2 s repealed The n
debtedness mcurred for th ese purposes JS not made subJeC t to the
revenue linked 1 m1tat ons or the 47&lt; rehrement m tatwn
Other sect ons of ArtiCle VII! whtch provtde for the World War II
CompensatiOn Fund debt and bond ssu ng author ty for h ghway pur
oses the Korean War bonu s sta te capttal mproveme11ts pubh c wo ks
~nd the ssuance of development bond s are epeal d Sect ons of Art cle
VIII whtch prohtbtt debt except as author zed by Seot ons I and 2 of
Art de VIII requ re creatwn of a Smk ng Fm d fo debt retirement
re utre a btenn al report of the CommisSioners of the Smking Fund
ana speCify the dulles of the C9mm ss oners to repay debt are also
re ealed Sectwn 6 of A t cle XU wh ch proh btts the state from
co~tractmg for mternal mp ovements except as othcrw se p ovtded n
the Cons! tul on s repealed
ARGUMENTS FOR THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
This Conslltut anal Amendment would REPEAL THE $750 000 DEBT
LIMIT ESTABLISHED IN 1851 and replace t w th a flex ble debt t ed
dtrectly to the states revenues
The b partisan Oh o Cons!Jtut onal Rev s on Co nm ss on recommen led
thts Amendment md ca).1Ag th at a flex ble debt l m t resp anSI e to the
states ab 1 ty to repay s tile bes t solut on lor mode n z ng the mechan s n
by wh1ch Ohto mcurs debt for cap tal tm p ovemcnt purposes
Recogmzmg the preference of the people of Oh o for Canst tutwn al
control m fiscal matte s thts amendment co t a ns he fol ow ng c
strict ons

PARTY PLANNED
A card party w ll be held at
the Sacred Heart Calhol c
Church basement Thursday
7 30 p m Donat ons of $2 w I
be taken at the door

TED W

s •

BROWN

Se~aryoSa~

SEEN VISITING
Jack Sm1th of Lancaster s
here for a v s t w th hiS aunts
Miss Erma S!IUth and Mrs
Genev1eve Me nhart

Generation Rap
By HeJen and Sue Botte)
HER TONGUE IS TIED IN KNOTS
RAP
I m not this way normally but w th a guy l real y l ke I m a
dumb freeze-act He speaks to me and I Just stand the e I
can t br ng myself to say Ht f rst (I m usually fnend y a d
at ease )
He doesn t know the difference between shy and snob and I
may lose hun before I even have him K ds have told me that at
one tune he I ked me but t won t last unless I can stop be ng a
FROZEN DUMMY
DEARF D
--.
Because you really hke this boy you re desperately afra d
you ll do something wrong so you freeze
Why don t you start thinkmg of hun rather than yourself
Perhaps he s JUSt as tll at ease as you are and needs the f rst
H to g ve him courage It s not all that d fftcult once you
turn on a sm1le HELEN
P S The follow ng letter may not be from your guy but t
shows how Signals (or lack of them] can be read wrong
DEAR RAP
There s th s great gtrlllike a lot but I don t think she likes
me I m pretty S'\fe she thinks I m not good enough for her
I can t be a carefree jolly goof-off once 111 a while person
like she hkes All! can be s se r ous understand ng and ca e a
lot
How does an awkward lost lor words nexper encod guy
like me go about gettmg a smooth svelt popular g rl hke he
to enJOY my company' PLEASE ADVISE
DEAR PLEASE ADVISE AND FROZEN DUMMY
Look the person you like nay be equally n awe of you Gtve
her him a break Start talk ng and then confess your shyness
It rnakes you hwnan and makes conversal on much eas er
HELEN AND SUE
DEAR HELEN AND SUE
I have a diff cult tune convmc ng my father that I could
poSSibly succeed m my dream goal I have wanted to become a
published wrtter for a very long bme If you w ll publish tlus
letter then my lather could see for himself that I can ndeed
wr te something and get It prmted Could you please lend me a
TO DAD IN PA FROM
hand m convmc ng him
DAUGHTER INN J
P S We had a d sagreement about me tak ng a wntmg
course by rna 1 I want htm to know I don t feel badly about hun
not approvmg
DEAR DAUGHTER
Letter duly prmted and may you succeed m your dream
goal SUE
DEAR DAUGHTER
I m wtth your father on the correspondence course You
can do much better by enroll ng m a very reasonable wntmg
class offered at rught by your local commumty college or adult
educatwn program You ll get personal gu dance and en
couragement I ere and you n learn how to sell because the
courses are usually taught by successful Journal sts who kno"
the ropes HELEN

Miss Hill honored
with bridal shower
NEW HAVEN M ss My :;;---Dale n orange wtth the wed
Roush and Mrs Jane Btrd ding bell mot f The napk ns
enterta ned recently w th a also ptcked up the color
bndal shower honormg the r scheme Fru t punch and'nuts
ous n Amy H ll m the soc a! we e se ved w th the cake
Attend ng we e Mar e C
roo n of St Paul s Lut CJ an
Roush Mary Mae Roush
Church New Haven
Carolyn
The refrestunent table was Joan Thomas
covered w th white and had Hesson Loutse Powell V ck
crystal candle holders " th Roush Ruth Roush Jean
autumn orange tapers Tl e Sayre Ma Jar e Walburn
while cake was tns r bed Clar ce Wallace Else Ohl
Best WJShes Amy and mgher Irene Hoschar and
daughter Sue Thacker Ann
Alderson Phyllis Ashley
Mary Burton Velma Roush
Kay
Roush
Flos s i e
Allensworth Joan Harmon
0 Thelma Ret mr e Jan
6 Ashworth AI ce Hwnphrey
and Jean Yoho
Mrs Amber I ohn hosted a
Sendtng g Its were 11 e
meeting of the M ss onary Mason Grade S h ool
Soctety of the Laurel Cl ff Teachers I outse Roush
Free Method st Church at her Mildred Fry Rhonda Wood
home recently
Zelma Kaytor Tana Simon
Mrs Dorts Shook opened ton Mary Rous h Sara
the meetmg wtth Mrs T na Dawso Jerry Layne Patty
Jacobs g1v ng the devotions Clark Paul ne Sm th R ta
us ng scnpture from the ll9th Pearson Jane Burdette Lou
Psalm and I Cor nth ans She Ellen Roush Mary Fry
also gave a medttatJOn ent t1
Sherry Roush Charlotte
ed Gett ng Ready to Move
C 10n and Mary C W ley
Prayer was by Mrs Jean
Wr ght whose read ngs n
luded How to Pray for M s
CLUB TO MEET
swns
A L tile Letter and
F
rst
neet ng or 1he M d
So Swtft the Way So Short
dl
port
Ltterary
Club w 11 be
the Day Della Curls read
held
on
Oct
19
at
tl e home of
Heavenly Treasurer
Mrs
S
bley
Slack
Mrs Slack
Guest at the meetmg was
Will rev ew The Eagle Has
Mrs Ruby Fr ck and others
Landed
attendmg were Sharon
Folmer Donna G lmo e Iva
Powell M ld ed Jacobs and
Susan Flestunan Mrs Shook
Thin for skln
had the clos ng prayer and
Want to th n vour faun
refreshmen s were served
dat on out a b t' Add a
Plans were made to work on a
l ght"e1ght mo stur zer
f
gu It presented to the Soc ety
your sktn s dry () f an
by Mrs Esta Wtsc
astr ngent for o ly sk 1

Mrs Lohn
hosts meetzn

)

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1

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h"'"l" &lt;'• · 11 1'' ,

.

Let The Want Ads Turn ·Unwanted Items .Into Cash -'

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CH.-\1\t;Es

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~OTJCE

\I :\\'1'-.- \1 )
ADVERTISJ:\l;
DEAD IJ\' ES

SUNDAY
12 til 8 P.M.

Oct 1i 1977
lCill ha \e e-~eryt-h ng gotn~ lor

th rs

\(hJ.

(:L~nwJg

year

LIBRA (Sopl

Reedsville
News Notes
Rt'L'f'llt '1St tors

\!15

\\t ll1am
\\ t:r't'

uf \11 and
L\mgro\t' and

\l rs

Dd11rt'S

and dau~hter
c~ ~ nrue of Chestc&gt;r. and
PatrtCI&lt;i s.n~ man and ~uri

Hoffman

fnend of \kron

\l r , an&lt;J

\Irs

-lrt hu r

L1sa Roberston of Selle. W
\ ,~ '1s1ted \\lth \lrs \ldbe l
\f l&gt;tl':t't nnd Mr
and \fr s
Vr,mk Rtst' Sund~h
~ir rmd ~Irs Crne W1lso n
\lr

at Sutton \\ \ 'a
and \lr s
D~n td t\

;-r .rlt!\

SmJth and D1tma spent the
\\f'ekend at Cahamw ,., llh
.\ lr and \lrs l nm Drake
,\ irs Hele'l \1 che 1 \ !Sit ed
\\ 1th :\-lr and :\1t s \hlto n
1 uttte on Te x a~ Road

recentl)
\ l rs H E W Llliams. \ 1r
P1c~ens.

and \lrs WatTen
~~~

23 · 0&lt;1.

and \Its I) le Ba lderson

ancl Ka\ spent Su nda' \\lth

:1-,Jrs Katln'!l D1 etz at
Bclp1e The b1M hda1 of B11l
D1ctz. of Columbus \\ 85
cc!elH a ted Other guests at
thl' o~etz home rncluded \11
.md :\lrs Robert Da'' Cnst ~
dnd Po-nd \1tchael o f Belpre
Rd &lt;Jnd \(:I nn Knoblr:HJch of
Columbus

23)

l..no wledge charm and
"t an• . . our assets today The
(W " one wno can lt tp you up I S
VOUfSE'If b~ be nQ._lOO~glob Ftnd
ou t more about yours t-11 by sendrna fo1 \Out copy o f Astr o
Gt ::J.Ph Le11er Matt SO cents lor
t'clCh .Jfld a long set f.addressed
stampea envelope to Ast ra
Graph P 0 Box 469 Rad ro Crty
St;Jt lon 'IT !0019 Be sure to
soec h your btlth s1gn

VOJe

The Metgs A g r oclJi tural
Socre t y By
Mrs Wallace
Br ad f ord Secrel ary
(IQ) 11, IB 25, 3tc

Local Bowling
Pom e roy Bowltng Lanes
Morntng Glones
Se pt 27, 1977
G rbbs Grocery
26
Newell Sunoco
22
G &amp; J Aut o Parts
18
No I
18
NO 5
tO
.Karr &amp; Van Zalidt
2
H 1gh tnd game - Th e lma
~borm• 173 Coke Ambrose

167

H t gh 1nd
3 games
Phyll t s Cl rne 435
Mary
Glllt l an 127
' Htgh 7eam Game
No 5

771
H 1gh 1eam J games
Newe l l Sunoco 22H

On~\ the

~·"~-'~-.~ 'Y

~~·
~~~ \

NFu"&lt;pap'er

I' ( ~~·r.'· ,

,'· ·J'\~

I

(~~u
s.4:;;

,,W..

11r ~1 '&gt; f'JII fJ( r ~IV'''

(Jul.".- lh•
tllf th lllhlll~ (!/( J/1 \ {J fli/J(,
/r1 thmh a lirJIJt II'. llfJW!u·~
!filfl

Of /i

TWO 10 te n o cn~s wtlll good
bu ld n1g srle or older home
suttoble lor ren10del111g water
and eleCinc rty o~&gt;a loble closE'
to hor drop rood Call 992 7036
altet 5 pm

IF YOU have a servrre to off er
want to bu y or~ ell s.amethrng
ae looking lor work
or
whprever
you II get re~u,lts
laster w rT I-. o Sen t m~l Won t A d
Co11992 2156

985 9996
FALL SPF.CIAL Pa r as ol Bou1 que
Beou1v Solon ne:.:t to 51-. ote a
Way Roller Rmk announce&amp; Per
mon&amp;nl SpeCial 10 "o off on
SIS $ 17 50 SIO durong mon th
ol Ocr Pnone q95 4141 open
Tues Thurs Fro Sat Closed
M on and Wed Operot01s Son
dro Kerns and Crystal 1Erwon )
Rayburn Owners Rochird and
Sondra Ker ns

Help) '

G ARAGE SALE Oc t 13 14 I 5
10 5 Wode
Thurs thru Sat
asso r I men ! of clean Items anl1
ques carn1 val depo essoan pal
larn glass old bootes and
rod'- •fl g chotr New sol verware
A ,•on bollles purnpk ons Bor
bate O ff utt resodence Old Rt
33 between CR I Bond 19
TWO FAMJl Y Yar d Sale Wed
Oct 12 Stor ts at 9 30 Roon or
sh one at
Rus1 c Hoi Is on
Syto c. use

nw•

·-·-~

A CAREER wo th o future foro man
or woman who wants th~ best
A good dav to Jn]e-c t same new
rr'l lr le A pay check every
elemeru 1nto yq.u r c areer It can
weelo. fantastiC frin ge benel tts ,
be great or srrall but rt wont be
al
l loc al wo rk Gtve us a coli at
~ ttect 1ve unless yo u do rt solo
q92 2480 or wrr te We stern
AQUARIUS {Jon 20·Fob 19) Soutnern lrfe Insurance 718 f l
Have fa rth rn the ~ npwledge and
E Motn Pom eroy O hro for rn
format tan
oo we:rs you already possess It
you tr y to delve too deeply tnto ADDR,ESSERS
WANTED
lm
the whys and where fores yau II
medra telyt Work at home no
nulltfy potenttal gams
expertence n ecessary
e•
cellenl pay Wrrte Amencon
PISCES ( Feb 20· March 20) As
Serv tce 8350 Park lane StJote
the power beh ind the throne you
269 Dallas TX 75231
hav.e few peers toda y It yo u ltp

MEIGS COU NTY Humane Socte ty
Carelrne and odopfiort Serv tce
99'2 7680 742 3162_ 9~2 5427
REGISTERED FEMAlE St Bernard
ro gtvE' away io good horne
Phone 7422123

your hand and try to take the MEN FOR em~ l aymenf at Su!)Or
Ru n Flour M t/1 Pomeroy Ohro
bo w s ho wever you II blow
App ly tn person
everythmg

AKC POODlE puppy
Apmot
Ha ve started shots
rnole
wormE'd
Has puppy clt p

llt1 luir li;:rurlllrl o(
1/rJ) ~ iJOfJjll f//1/fl \

•

fitffia-¥Je:-=. -·~
___..z..._~....-

ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19.
Cooperat t"' e et!orts are lavored
today You II be able to achreve
meeting s of the m1nd no t poss rble before On l he homefr ont
tread sotlly
TAURUS (Apnl 20·M•y 20) You
can fo rmulate new mel hods to
day to asstst you Th1s ts es
pectalty 1rue rn handicra fts even
11 they re only a hObby

GEMINI {Moy 21-Jun• 30) An
e;.; cellent day lo r a new con tact
be 11 ro mant tc soc1al or tn the
rea l m ot frtendshlp Avo1d
however tryrng lo mpress wtlh
real or pretended afl luence
harmony m the home today
You r cont rrbtJ!Jon IS to act un selftshly and wrthOut reser.,.atron

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Ignore
dou bts 1na1 mtght su rface today
Hq;ve tatth rn your abtlt ty Take
the tnrt1atrve Othe-rs w1 11
recogn1ze your 1eadersh1p
qual1t 1es

VIRGO (Aug

23-Stpl 22)

Forget tryrng to please e"'eryone
Restr tc t you rsell to dealing on a
one- to one bas1s today Ftnan cl cl l ga rn s wrll accrue from
l:lyeba ll negotlat rons
~EWSP.\PE R

E'HF.RPRI SE i\SSN

I

THE ALMANAC
United Press InternaUooal

Today IS Tuesday, Oct II.
the 284thda) of) 9ii \\llh Silo
follow
The moon ts
tts ne w phase

1970 ' • TON CHEVROLE T Truck
13 000 mt extra trre s S3 800
Coll742 2316

- ------ - - --1972PINTO 949276 1 ohe[Sdur
1967 THUNDERBIRD

991

Prestdent Franklin
D
Roo sevelt , was born Ot1 ll ,
1884
•
On th&lt;s da y m history ·
In 1811, the fir st steam·
• powered ferry In the world
::.tarted tt s run between New
York C1ty and Hobok en, N J
In 1868 , Thomas Alva

Edtson ftled papers for his
fi rst rn. . ~ nt lo n - an electrica l
vot e record er t o tabulate
floor votes m CongresS m a
matter of mmutes Congress
reJected 1t
In 1962, Pope J ohn XXIII
Se(ond Va tJCml
Cou ncil m St

opened the
Ecu m em ca l

Bast lH.'H m

Rome

In 1975, V&lt;ce Pres1dent
Nelson Roc kefeller urged 11
s• 1ft federal lo an to help New

York

r · ll~

bankrupt &lt;')

tiVOJd

~co nomH.

·

tfl,,u~h1 for tl1c d~~~
P r es td en t
I• rttn klln
D
Hoosc"~&gt;d l s.nd , ·1 he [(::-sf o f
our prog rc~s 1s nut v.hcthrr

A

$400

Coli

2589

1972 MERCURY MARQUIS 4 dr
on con d Ce ll 9Q2 7135 or 9
l tberty Ave Pomeroy OH
1%5 CHEVY WAGO N 2B3 eng
slondord S-425 1126Eo s1 Mom
51 Pomeroy

-

--------~

1971 PINTO $495 Cal 1992 7523

c:;__~-

~-

197'2
CHEVRO LET
IMPA LA
Custom $5~ 9916310 off er 6
pm

AUCTION EVE RY Frt ] pm lots
of new and used merchon dr se
at Oh1a Rt \'e r Au c!Jan Me1g'&gt;
Plaza M rddlepor t Ohto Home
_f'h_o_nc _
13_04_) 7_7c.
3_5_47_1_ _~

1073 PONTI AC GR AN O Prtx P 5
P B A C powe r sea ts lo ll
w heel AM FM stereo wt th tope
player
oth er ex l ros
Real
sh ar p 51 BOO Ca ll evenongs
992 7055 Of 002 3692

AUCTION SALE evety Tues and
Fn at 7 pm New an d used
merchondt se at Ohro Rrve r Auc
Ir on Me1g s Plo za Mrddleport
O ht o
Home Phone (304 )
773' 547 I

IN THE COURT OF
COMM ON PLEAS
MEIG S COUNTY , OHIO
TOM J TEASLEY
Rou t e 1
Pomer oy Oh ro 45769
P l otrntllf

ftliJtll. 11 t ~ i.dt~ !h1 r \41 '
IJI'It\ ldt:, IHJUgh f, •r llt tJ• t• 1.\ho r
hu \ t l oll• l tll lt•

WA NT TO rent or ren t wt lh op ft on
to buy Prefer aut of . fa wn
Chtldren and pets. House or
Mobile Home 742 2984

"

-~

3 AND 4 RM lurntshed and un
fvr noshed opl s Ph one 992
5434
AVA ILABLE AT Ro~&gt;ersode Ap ts 1
bedroom $105per mon th $ 150
securofy depostl 992 6098
FO~R

f

rt. r I&lt;

•~I

M t.'o q &lt;;

,..

c

Jl

r nun t ,.

fill' ..,'

' ' !' fllf) /1

II

,r• r
( uurt

iHI ( ~prt

11UJ I II 111 I• Ill

(

' ) 111 1

ROOMS and both
only No pe ts 992 5908

Adult s

TWO BEDROOM Trorler
only 99'1 3374

Adult s

COU NTR Y MOBilE Hom e Pork
Ro ute 33 norl h of Pomeroy
l arge lots Co! I q92 747fj
lnrredthle 1 Why pa y hrgh elect nc
holl5 th1 :. Wtnter ? l e t us pov,
them for you One bedroom •
~ram
S1JO now ovorlabl e
Vr lloge Manor Tnor d and Mrll
!-". t ree t ~ Moddleporr Telephone
992 7 '87 Equal Housmg Op
por tu n1 ty
1

H:F HOUSI: furn Adult s onl y
Ideal fo, 2 n1en Nq pe t~
q'-1 1 7191 Sun onytune alter
Su p nnr tri ne oiler !:lprn
MOHill HOMI: foo Renl
IQIOit(JII A ib ~Jol Holl 949
~

I

.1

q lrO io!y 0~u_&gt;ol 'illlld11'f'- to nrp
Conl"} 5tao(lolt ~olt:-~ "!1 6J
N nl Pt Plo?o~on l

~hone

t'or&amp;.le

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

CO Al lqnestonc and col(lurr\
lhlo•• dc and •alrrutH b1 rnc lor
uu~ r con lr ol and spen al o)lo • tng
'&gt; air lor l 01mer s b :ce lsror Salt
Works, Mo ttl Streer P o n .ero ~
Ohoo or phone 991 389 r

Bo x 34

HOLSTEIN

1975 350 JOH N OEERE do.~:er w1th
J6S hou r s 27 ton set of new
truck scales 22 long ~2 5408
19il&gt;7 CHE VY SCO TT SDALE Twa
tones., sltd 1ng glass wondow,
992 5671

-

I~MII:R ~ fJAU

Non•
'}'} !,

l ur oenl YIJ /. Jr62

LAR'(,f· MO !illE tl o rnt~ lot L,tunlry
~ll~ +t ,.g
Mt:.•g . S• hnoh:.
All
• lllol•t-') UVI)d(Jbl&lt;• !j, 1111 l jel'&gt;
,, , ,, ,;,,~y IIi lin

•279.95
test

your

wafer

FOR SALE
N e w Co -Op water and
softeners, model VC SVI.
Only $279 95
Save sso.oo on a new
Hotpomt Refngerator
1 New 20 cubtc ft . Chest
Freezer
S2.5 00 Dtscount
{ 1) Good R efng erator S200
1 Good
Used
Amana
Uprtgllt Freezer, 525 0 00
1 Good Used McCullough
10 tOchamsaw
S125
1 Good used McCullough
JIO E Cham Saw
S95
1 Good U sed ,Homeltte
Xli2 Cham Saw
S12S
I Good U sed Hom e llte
Cham Saw
S50
1 Good U sed M cCu llough
Chatn Saw
$50

Pomeroy Landmark

9. ~Jack W Car sey, Mgr
Ail. Phone 992 ·2181 '
Real .Mtate lor Sale
·:

!tiM~

Kmgsbury Home Sales

' Tht OrtflnJton
Not rt" Imitators

FOR SA tE or trad e or land con
tract
2 bedroom house tn
Rutl and 992 58 58

HOMESITES l or sole 1 acre ond
up Mtddleport near ~ u tl ond
Call 992 7-48 1

FOR SAlE or Rent tn rec bedroom
h ome tn Roctne 949 2559

NEW 3 bedroo m house 2 baths
oil elec
I acre Moddlepor t
close Ia Rutland Phone 9CI2
7481

·,

11' \l\iNt ffi1t

conopy

S600
Coli
992 3Jb2

Needs rep01r
e,..enrngs
B1ll

WE'VE I!EE-N ¥.0NOERING WHY
WE HAVEN'T HAP 'THE PLEASURE
~ 'lOUt&lt;: COMPANY LATELY!

W!;LL, TO TElL

YOUTHE~~.

I'VE SEEN SUSV

WITH SOMETHING!

~~~

I BISCER I
K'J I I KJ

Real

~.:sta le

~--

B TEAFORD, S~

716 E Second Street
Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769

NEW LJSTI~G - ThiS 3
bedroomer ha&lt;:.
of the
n ver i''
·nace.
rlfy room .
di ni ng,
lar ge co.tcrete front porch
on nlce lot for $16,500

..0
.0-\.:
S ...

WOULD YOU

~

bedrooms , dmmg room ,
modern ktfchen
bath ,
ca rpet tng , panelt ng , nat
gas
furn ace
Ask ing

$26,600 00
ONE FLOOR PLAN -

J

bedrooms ~

ba t h , dmtng
room , k t tchen tn c l udes
range &amp; refrtg Nat gas
heat basemen1, garden
spa ce $12,500

JUST LISTED -

2 s1ory

frame
tn
t:}l(cellent
cond ttion 3 or 4 bedroom s,
bath , mode rn kitchen nat
gas
hot
water
heat

save
ratny
bath ,
water

WE HAVE A GOOD
SELECTION
OF
PRO~ERTY FO~ SALE
AT THIS TIME , DROP IN
AND HAVE A LOOK.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REAL TO~
HANK , KATHY &amp;
LEONA CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
992 225 9 -

AND K tlchens
remodeled ceromo c ltle plurTI ·
bmg corpenl r y and general
morn te nonce
13 years ex
3b85
pen ence

~

/

m

L1ke 57

BLOWN IN SU LATION Get th ree
esltmotes Coli 6.67 b479 lor
tree estima te
.
DEAL WITH on Independent
dealer where your money ts
spent loc ally w1th other mer
chants Ba1ley s A sh land the
on ly 1pdependenl on town , not o
co mpany run stot oon Oclober
Specrol American made cors
lube, ·Sots Volv olme AC od
and f tl ter $10 Tax mcluded In
stock new ond recapped snow
1tres botterte s has.es , belts
plugs , potn l s ond othe r ac
cessartes Plant)' o f Vo lvo ftnl&gt;'
antif ree ze Open 7 lo 8 30
Mon lhru Fn Sat 8 30 to 7 00
Closed Sun Other work done

--

For

Buy fhiS and

your money for a
day
3 be d rooms,
natura l gas , city
and large garden for

orly 57 ,000
NEW LISTING -

R1ver

fron t age
with
th1 s
4
bedroom
home
Has
central heatmg and large
lot In Syracuse and l USt

PIANO TUNING and Repo tr Lane
Oomels 992 2082 12 years ser
vrce to Trr Coun ty Reference
Elberfe1ds

~1 6.500

JUST STARTING OUT OR
OWN
PROPERTY
ALREADY, YOU SHOULD
SEE WHAT WE HAVE TO
OFFER .

GASOUNE ALLEY

Operation

Riqht! It's

top secretr

Doorstep

When do

we start
search1nq .

Basket?

r~~~~~~~:2~~~;:~~f~~~~~~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~S~~\]

~fU~!:~~~~~~r~~~;~~:~~"'~"'
OVeR

AND
.,.

/(ILL h'!M I

-

WILL YOU FElLAS

'I? SNIFFANYS

.JEWELRY
GIVE
Me ASlbRE'
P.IDE'
~";---,-,..---..,

'"':;;;:~~~~ii~

,.

New, 12 r oom, 4 bedroom bnck home with two acres of
ground, .2 car garage with carport 2lf:r baths, 2500 sq
tt of hvrng space, electnc heat/ very modern kitehen
and the best appliances Fireplace with heat·ll·later.
Located 3 miles from Rt. 7, past Chester, Ohio, turn left
on f!rst road past West Shade River Shown by
appotntment only ,

11-1AN K5 FOIZ

BEING ~ONEBT
W111-1 MS WENDY
IT HUR l&amp; BUT
I 'LL GET OV::R

HOBSTETTER REALTY

MAYBE TON IGHT
WILL BE YOUR
NIGHT TO FIND

:30Mt:0NE1

BIRDIE

IT, IGUE&amp;&amp;

GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.
Rea I Estate Broker

Phone 614-981-4186 after 4: 'oo P.M.
I

1' 2 acres of secluded home srte, wooded, all
utrhll ~s available, s urvey ed, approved by
the planning commission for sewage,
loca t ed one m1t e from Tuppers Plains, Ohio,
on Summerfield road . Ideal for tratler,
double w•de, or hom e. Pnc~ to sell at
$4,000 .00

HOBSTETTER REALTY
GeorgeS Hob s t e ller Jr.
Re al Estate Broker,
Box 101. Pomeroy , Ohro
Ph o n &lt; ' ~ : 4-985 -4186 after 4 p .m.

BOTTLE

TEMPER

There was an urge ln thelr son 1o become

this-A "S-URGE-ON"

Paul Gaudino Family F1tness

~ Su nr ise Semester 10
6 25--Chrlstopher Closeup 10; 6. 30-News Conference
4; News 6. Sunrise Semester 8; 6 A5--Mornlng
Report 3; 6 so-Good Morn ing, West VIrginia

13 ; 6 ; S~huck Wh ite Reports 10; Good Morning ,
Trl State 13,
7 oo-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning Amer ica 6, 13, CBS
News 8, Bullwlnkle 10, 7, 31)-Schoolles JO
8 ·00-Capt . Kangaroo 8,10, Sesame St. 33.
9.0Q-Merv Griffin 3, Phil Donahue 4,13,15; New
Mickey Mouse Club 6, Fa'l'lly Affair 8.10.
9 31)-Edge of Night trAndy Griffith B; Here' s Lucy 10
10:0Q-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15, Dinah 6, Here' • Lucy 8,
Joker' s Wild 10, Mike Douglas 13
10.31)-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15, Price Is Rlght8,10.
11 ·OQ-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15, Happy Days 6, 13,
Marcus Welby, M.D 4, Elec. Co 20.
11.31)-Knockout 3, 15; Fam ily Feud 6, 13, Love of Life
B. 10, Sesame S 20,33, 11 ·55-CBS News B; Loving
Free 10
12 oo-News 3,4,6, 10, To Say The Least 15; Divorce
Court 8; Midday 13.
12: 31)-Chlco &amp; the Man 3,15; Ryan' s Hope 6,13, Bob
Braun 4, Search for Tomorrow 8,10; ' Eiec Co. 33.
1 oo-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6, 13, News 8,
Young &amp; the Restless 10, Not tor Women Only 15
1 31)-0ays of Our Lives 3,4, 15, As The World Turns
8,10, 2 OQ-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13
2 31)-Doctors 3, ~ , 15; One Life to Live 6, 13, Gui ding
Light 8,10
J ·OQ-Another World 3,4, IS, All In The Famil y 8, 10,
Ohio Journal 20.
3· 15---General Hosplta\6,13 , 3.31)-Match Game 8,10,
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20
4 01)-Mister Cartoon 3, Little Rascals-Our Gang 4,
Gong Show IS ; Bewitched 6, Gilligan's Is. 8,
Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Dinah 13,
4'30--My Three Sons 3; Aflerschool Specia l 6, Partridge Fam ily 4; Brady Bunch 8, 10; Utile Rascals
• 15
3,

My Three Sons 4;

Gunsmoke 8;

Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 ; Aflerschool
Special 13, My Three Sons IS
s 3()-{)dd Couple 4; News 6, E lee. Co 20,33: Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan's Heroes 15.

6.0Q-News 3.~.8. 10, 13, 15; Zoom 20
6·31)-NBC News3 ,~, 1S; ABC News 13, Carol Bu rnett &amp;
Friends 6, CBS News 8, 10, Pests, Pesticides &amp;
Safety 20
7.oo-Truth or Cons 3; Cross-Wits 4; Liars Club 6 ; Sha
Na Na 8, News 10, To Tell the Truth 13; Gilligan 's
Is. 15, Daniel Foster, MD 20; Big Green Magazine
33.
7:31)-Funny Farm 3; Sha Na Na ~~Match Game PM 6 ,
Family Feud 8, MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33; The
Judge 10, In Search of 13; Wild Kingdom 15
B:QI)-Grlzzly Adams 3,4,15 , World Series 6,13, Good
Times 8,10; Nova 20,33; 8 31)-Bustlng Loose 8, 10.
9·1)1)-()regon Trail; Movie "The G.rl Called Hatter
Fox"

a,101

Great Performances 33;

American

Short Story 20 .
10.01)-Blg Hawaii 3,4,15; News 20
10 31)-As We See 1120, 11.Do-News 3,4,8,10,15, Dick
Cavett 20, MacNeil-Lehrer Report 33
11 ·15---News ~.6, 13; 11 31)-Johnny Carson 3,4,15;
Hawaii Flve-0 B; ABC News 33; Movie "The

DOWN
I Snooks or

Dumphng
2 V1cllm of

Fakers" 10.

xe nophobia

3 London
landmark
(2 wds l
4 Dolores
- Rio
5 Monk's home
6 '' - Enter·
tam You"
(2 wds .)
7 Frddler
crab
8 Utthty woi'·
ker's perch
(2 wds. )
9 Ftrst or
!muted
10 JtHy

12 4s-Mod

11 45---Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13; 12·QQ-Janakl 33
12 40--Movle "The Gun and the Nun" 8, 12 · 55-News

13

•

l .OG-Tomorr,w 3,4; l 30-M~ ry Hartman 10.
Yesterd~y's

16 Ruling
power ;
(abbr )
19 Vet!
22 Type
23 P1lot's
path
( 2 wds .)
24 Mr D1t· •
hers mate
25 Lyncal

Answer

Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 7 PM. - Chino lPG I
9 &amp; 11 P M - The Women {R)
Cable Channel 5 6·30 PM - Testimony Time
7:00- Paul Gaudino Family Fitness
7·30- Marshall Football
t
10.00 - 700 Club.

26 Conven·
bon hall
display
28 Greek island
29 Vtolmist 's
purchase
Tuesday, October 12
33 Turf
35 Do fancy
work
'·
36 Clothing
stze (abbr.)
Oswald

·-

BRIDGE
and Jim Jacoby

Don't stop thinking now
12
NORTH
,j.J4
• J 762

+AKQ7 53

•Q

.9

WEST (D)
EAST
• K JO 8
i/to 9 B
'AKI
• J IOBI2
t6
• 9 6 5I
"'K '108732
SOUTH
.AQ 76532
• Q 53
+9
• AJ
Bolh vulnerable

matnarch
36 Kennedy
37
3S "Essays
of
- "
Pnsoner

possibthty?

You can 1 but 1t reqmresconSiderable care. You start by
cashmg your ace of clubs and
rulfmg the Jack
Now tf you stop thmking and
JUSt lead dummy's jack of
spades the hand wilt collapse.
West wtll take hts king and
lead a diamond You won't be
able to shut out hts 10 of
trumps.
So you cash one high dta·
mond before teadmg that Jack
of spades and nothmg can
touch you .

A Texas reader wants to
know what happens when the
39 Focahze
10
Prpper
Pass Pass Pass
contract 1s three hearts
bloke
Openm1 lead - K¥
Declarer makes mne trtcks
I
~but IS entitled to two more
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work 1\: 1.....,.----:-:,..,.-:-----c:--.,...---1 because of the revoke Does
A x y D L 8 A i\ x B
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
he make game?
fo L 0 N G F E !, L o w
Here Is a problem hand
We have answered this
composed by Eddy Kanta~ , questton several times before
One l et t er s 1mply $t an ds for another In this sample A is one of our greatest players
Pe nalty tncks only count
used for the three L 's, X for the two O's, etc Smg le letlers, Try to avotd looking at the below the line tf they help
apos trophes t h e length anrl formation of the wo rds are all East-West hands until you
declarer make hts contract
hmt s Each day the ('Ode' letters are d1fterenl
have planned your entire play Otherwtse, they are simply
CRVPTOQUOTES
startmg at trtck lour.
,
scored as overtncks. Thus,
West starts out by playmg thrs declarer gets 60 points
D H L W B • ace·kmg and a third heart
RG
above the !me
0 E P
GHTP
RIW
You wm m your own hand and
T G A W must plan the play
RG
MC
(Do you have a question for
OGQE H
E
CRE HL
You start by assummg that the experts? Write 'As-'!' tl1e
Js c obys" care of this
H W U · West writ hold both black
MR MCH ' R
EHL RIWH
IWB nswspaper The Jacobys w11/
kmgs He really needs them to
answer Individual quest10ns If
C
R
E
H
L
have
an
opening
bid
Maybe
D
H
L
W
B
RG
WCCEBP
stamped , se/1 -sdd rsssed
• thts doesn't worry you and tt snvefopes are enclosed The
1 wB CPLHWP IEBBM C
won 't unless rt turns out that
most mterestlng questions w'lf
tn1 used m this column and wilf
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: OLD WORDS IS UKE OLD West holds three trumps and
c en1e co p/as of JACOBY
~NDS, YOU KNOW 'EM THE MINUTE YOU . SEE Just one diamond Can you re
MODERN}
c.
guard agamst that unpleasant
'EM - WILL ROGERS
West

t•

North East
I+
Pass

FRI

-

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

I

1can

HIGH SCHOOL Sen1ors w dl do
babys1111ng whde
Southern
local School IS dosed Have
own tronsportot1an and plenty
of g~od r eferences 949 2677 ,
after 4 30 pm

992 6191

I I] [X I IX I J!

Answer

ACROSS
.I Sousa
group
1s Bassoons '
relattves
11 To shelter
12 Pull back
13 i nvmce
14 Type style
15 Verily
16 School of
whales
17 Ike's
theater
~
18 "That's
&lt;0- 1!
enough 1''
(2 wds )
20 Fratermty
symbol
21 Shade of
~------..------:--blue
Good I
22 Wcanng
use the
boots
overtime r 23 Helper
(abbr .)
24 - 's age
25 OptfOI
26 Innate
27 Gold (Sp.)
28 Name m
the news
30 Burldmg
wmg
31 Ac1d
tml!als
32 Explode
34 Become
bght

REAL ESTA~ FOR SALE

$31 ,900 00
VVe have 2 good goeng
bu sme ss for sale For
tnformatton plea se drop m
the offtee

BATHROOM~

a locati on on good country
yea r a round road 53 acres
w1 th coa l c ropprng out. 2
good spnngs, land lays
good and al l m1nerals

516,500
WHY NOT

JUST LIS TED - Ranch
t ype about 12 yrs old, 3

HOWERY
AND MARTIN E11
cavollng ,
septtC • " •ys tem s.. 1
- dozer backhoe dump trv c ~
lrmeslone
grovel
blacktop
pa,.rng Rt 143 Phone 1 (614)
698 7331

EXCAVATING BACKHOE , dozer,
dump
trencne r
low boy
sep tr c sys tems
Btll
trucks
Pullms phone 99:2 2478 doy or
nrgh t
___...,

Now arrang e the orcled leiters to
torm the surpnse answer, as sug
gested by the above cartoon

by THOMAS JOSEPH
BORN LOSER

CARPENTER
floormg
ceolrng
panelin g Phone 992 2759

acres. a 3 bedroom home.
bath , otl fur na ce , nice
gambrel roof ba r n wtth
electric,
water ,
and
concreote floor s
Lots of
otller
butldtngs
Only

1

POMEROY, 0.

-

I

a.

7 .30 - Athen .. Band Fetlval
10 00 - 700 Club
N.ov1e Channel 4 5 &amp; 9 PM. - Swashbuckler !PG)
7 &amp; 11 PM -Si lent Movie {PG I
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1977
5 45-Farm Rj!port 13, S SG-PTL Club 13; 5.55---

s oo-Bonanza

'~

11

WILL do roofrng cons truclton
plumbt ng and heat on g No jOb
too large or too sm all Phone
742 2348

a
fa st sa le on thts 3 bedroom
home
Has bath . c t ty
wa t er, gas furnace co rner
lot and garage $17,500
COMFORTABLE - Old 4
bedroom house on level 2
lots wt f h bath, ct ty water
na t ural ga s tn R u tland
$14,000
TERRIFIC - Fmtshe d m
Nat1ve Oak large room s
tnc lude dtn tn g
and 4
bedrooms
Att1 c
f or
-te-rt'ge
w rap
around
porch . 2 car garage on
corner lot SJS.OOO

529,000
HOW ABOUT THIS -

MAIN

EXC AVATING doler
backhoe
and dt!Ch litr Charles R Hot
held
Bo ck Hoe Se r v1ce,
Rutland Oh10 Phone 742 1008

EXECUTIVE HOME - A

BA~GAIN
Ctr cumstances r~utre

It

THE HANDe&gt;OME
eACHELOFC:.

Jumbles FINIS GULLY

Yesterdays

m

frne qual1ty bu1 lt home fhts
tS J bedrooms tn right
decor , maste r has bath ,
also utt11ty room , fa m tly
and patro One ac re Plenty
r oom for chi ldren S45 .000

WANT .A

tO

WHA"T ALL. THE GIRL-5&gt;
LIKED M05T A60UT

(Answers tomorrow)

NOW IT'LL BE S AFE TO GO
ON II'H O 1HE CIH ··
C'MON, SANDY

IF 11 IS SOME TRI CK , SHE
SOON WILL PASS O VER
T~ IS BRIDGE TO foefAC/1
THE CITY -

EXC A VAliN G doler loader and
bockhqe wo rk dump trucks
ond lo boys far hrr e wtll haul
t.ll drr t to sail lun eslon e and
gravel Co li Bob or Roger Jet
fers day ph one
7089 mgh t
phone 9q2 3525 or 992 5232

Phone 992 3325

-

Answer: HE[

SEWING MACHINE Repou s ser
\I tee a ll moke5 992 2184
The
Fabrtc
Sh op
Pome roy
Au thorrzed Sm ger Soles and
.?erv t(O We~ rpen Sc tssor-2._

~EALTOR

fiJl' Salt'

ICOA1±
I K ]

REMODELING Plumbrng heottng
and oil types ol gener al reporr
Work gua rante ed 20 years ex
perlence ~h~n.! 992 24~

fttAL!CR

VI~GIL

byHenn Arn.oldandBoblea

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter IQ each square, to form
tour ordtnary words

ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
Sweeper s toasters rrons all
small opphonce.s lawn mower
nex t to St ol e Hrg llway Carage
on Route 7 Phone {bl4 ) 985
3825

TEAFORDm

1972 Et CONA 12 x 70 It M abtl~
Home
E"cellent ca ndo llan
Tota l electroc A1r con dtt to ntng
S 15 ()()() 110lue new now ' '
pr oc e (304) 773 sqb5

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

BRADFORD. Auctioneer
Cam
ple te Servtce Phone 949 2487
or 949 2000 Roctn..e , Oh to Cnlt
Sradl ord

30 M AR LET I HOUSE Tr arler

wrth

MacNeil-

11 JI)-Johnny Carson 3,4,1 5; Kolak 8; ABC News 33;
Movie " The Deadly Affair" 10

l'o.-~Ift':•Pnr~

,...

... et Pomeroy landmark
soft en &amp; co ndtfmn your
water and Co-op water
softener , Model UC · XVI
Now Only

FIND

11 4!--f..Ar.vle " Melyln Pjlrvls, G -Man" 13, Lohman &amp;

~I

'It I 1M

•
1974
YAMAHA
360
1q76
Kowosoko400 9916014
SM AL L for m for sole IO"o down
o wner fuionced Monroe Covn
FIE LD CHOPPER lnternatoonal 50
ty W Vo Phone (304 ) 772
Enltloge blower wo lh pope or
3 102 or (304) 77 '1 J22?
s11o JO bole ~hay co nveyo r us
ed '1 yeors Lorge bales a Iloilo COUN TR'l farmland woth sedud
orchard gross hay B43 2256
ed woods wale r and good OC •
aherb pm
cess m Mo11roe Coun ty W Va
$1 000 dawn coil (304) 772
125 000 BTU Forced A r Fuel Otl
3102 or (304) 772 3'227
Lennox
Fu rnace
W2 2526

L et us
Free

!192-2206 or 992-7630

.

J(

10 :JO-B lack Perspecftve o n the News 20.
11 QQ-News 3,4,8, 10, 15, Dick Cavett 20,
Lehrer Report 33

huttl Pomtr11)', 0

992 7014 01 SlOP BY 1100 I M!IN
Sl POIIIROY, OHIO FOR A f!EI
ESfiMm

-~

8

3,4,15, Lou Grant 8,10, Equality 33, News 20

TELL. IF
l CAN'T

COM~ANY!

Carpet &amp;Upholstery
Phone llrk1 Yoon&amp;

call

FOUR HEAD o f bull co lves bOO
lbs House trooler 8 " SO
su table os o carnper 992 2307

9 30-0ne Day at a Ttme 8,10, 10 ClO-Richard Pryor

Young's
Carpeting

'"ts

Ph ) 71&lt;210
12/lfC

Reedsville, 0

GREEN BEAN S holt runne rs and

HEREFORD
B43 7353

HOW

CA'-1 I

Supenor
Steam btrution

HOM£ We luve ara1llbte rn J 11rret, ol

PARTS ·- LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES

APPlES FITZ PATRIC K Or chards
Srote Ro ute 689
Ph one
Wtl kc svtlle 669 3785

991 7l91

MR.

L____________________, _,

Color\ hfe·llme llu11tn11m undetp l ll~·
For your puce ol mmd Jn~ to
Si ~ fOUl tnSUIJfiCI eompJn~ liS
Itt down JOUI matule hamt T
he
downs Jte mechaniCilly tnstal"d to
mu11 m111mum Alit' Conbtcl us lor
I qUJiilf IWfllfl&amp; Don't Will ltll lt e
f01ms on you1 root. Itt us COlt tl now
, Jnd stop potential "•ks. CALL

Automatic
Transmission StriiCe

ALADDIN KEROSINE lamp arrd
heaters r e plocement
part ~
lhornney rnontels w•clo. ~ etc
Stop m lor demons tra roon ond
lree
ca talogue
M o.,n ta on
leather and General St ore
IOJ 106 W Unoon St Athens
OhiO 592 5478 •

MEAT CASE cosh r cgtster addrng
rnochtne ont1que candy show
co~t&gt;
on
good condrtton
Breakfosl table and chans
Randy Humphreys 992 7318

THE I\!
HONEST~~.
TUSB5 '
ALL I CAI&lt;J TELL 'IOU
W~ EI'!E- THe
HECK I!&gt; H!H
15·· CAPTAIN EA5Y
HES SU~POSEP
HA~N'T COM~ IN 'lET'
TO I!&gt;E I&lt;.UIJ 11./6 THIS

PU92 2174

992399)

SAVE ON YOUR FUEL Bill !~IS
WINTIR AND 8E!U111Y YOUR MOBIL!

SWAIN

tlONOM¥' TRACTOR wrth oil o1
1och11\D11t s ltlo..e llE' W osktng
S2'250 Phone 161 &lt;I ) 698 3290

997 5537 or

p~

th•

t•

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Sytmlst, OhiO

Chester, Oh io

B Do-Dick Clark's Good Old Days 3,4, 15, Fitzpatrick•
8, 10. Wor ld Senes 6.13. A Good Dissonance Like a
Man :&gt;0,33
9 Do-Mash 8, 10, Tour En L'Air Ballet Adagio 33, VTR
20.

,---:. - --:-----.,· ...~

3290

CALL

,,h"l•lor
...

lARRY LAVENDER

8 29 pd

CAMPER
S600
Also
horse
tr ader $450 Ph one (614 1 698

FI RE WOOD

981 3806

Squares 3.4; Wolfman Jack 6 ;
Country Carnival 8 ; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33,
Price 15 Right 10, That's Hollywood 13

Service
rnt!:flR
,,_ rh• '-'e•it tr..O .., 8ulhio•.,

STORM _
WINDOWS I OODRS
REI'IACEMENI
WINOOWS
!lUMINUM
SlOING-SOffiTT
GUnEIISAWNINGS

TUESDAY , OCTOBER ll.ltl/

10, Gilligan's Is 15, French Chef 20, STudio See 33.

Radiator~

lnsullhen ServiCes
ftn1nc1nt AnilJblt:
Blown Into Walk I Atftu

7 ·00 -

7 30-Hollywood

EXPERIENCED

Blown

R es tdentral
and
commerc 1al
Call
for
estrmate, 24 hour 'jerv tce
Anyday , .1nyt 1m e

"

bunch Ptd, )'Our o wn brmg
ca tl!Othe r Dovts Form Pha11 e
247 2198

.

1

1 25-News 13, 1::Jo-Mary Hartman 10
Cable Channel l 6 30 PM. - Testimony Time

6 31)-NBC News3,4,15, ABC N ews 13. C-aroll:iurnett :....
Fr1ends 6, CBS N ews 8,1 0; As We See If 20
~7 00- Truth or Cons. J , Cross Wtts 4, L iars Club 6 ,
Pop Goes he Country 8, To T ell the Truth 13; News

•

' FREE ESTIMATES

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

1972 GRAN TORINO Sport good
co ndo! on $1000 74'1 2930

GLE NNA JOYC E TEASLE Y
&lt;tddress unknown
Oet en dant
No l 65B6
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
To Glenna Joyce Teasley ,
wh ose las! known address
was Roul c 1, Pomeroy , Ohto ,
457 69 you ar e he r eby n ot rf ted
th at you have been na!T(ed
Oc l endan1 1n a 1c da 1 ac t ron
c n t li ed Tom J
Teasley ,
Pla tn 1rft v s Gl e nna Joyce
Teasley D el endCinl
Tht s
actr on nas been assr~;~ncd
Case No 16586 and 1S pcndtnq
tn thecCou rt ot Common
P leas of M etgs Counly
Pome r o y, Oh1 o J5769
Th e Obt ec t o f the cornpl aon\
1., a de m and tor d1\lor ce anti
triln -s ter o f ! he equoly of 1he
0P f enO.:tn1 rn the Dersonal
p r operty ot th e part1es 10 l hc
P lat nlof f and oth er r e locf
Y ou are; requor ed to unswe r
the compf,l tnt wrthtn 78 dny s
il fl cr the l asf publt cat JO rt of
1htS nO i lCC Whi Ch Wd l be
PtJbl ~ht d on ce £'11Ch weelo.. f or
~rx
'• UCUS '&gt;! VC week s Th e
lcH I ou ll l rca tron wtll be ITlild f'
rn NOvP r lltr 1 1?71 , and th e
IB uav ~ tor dTJ.O.WP.r ;o.ttll
corrr men&lt;t on1 lht~l Ontr
111 c ase o f yo u r ta tl1t r e to
rJro'&gt;We '" or O ll tc rw o~f' r espond
,1&lt;, rt qurr n{] IJy IIH 01110 Ru le!.
l &gt;f ( •vol il tlCf'dUrt.•, d iVOI( (:j,
wilt h• ur.w lt.' d

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING .

'"''i })

I odP'' 1/;f ) SJ
I
!:h111~hou"•' S.J ijl~ J old do"n
51 1utl up \Vt:&gt; ~.;-1 1 H~•vlll' and

Also all breed dog groomrng
742 3162

1967 FASTBACK MUSTANG 289
Hur st four spe ed wilh lockout
r e~&gt;erse
5700 Co lt 992-5943
oiler 5 00

dd tn'lf(' tu the a btJ nrlttnt i. • f t huM' v.hu haH
"e

on,.ttme

1975 FORD PIN TO M P G Good
gas mrlcage Call 992 7512
ofler 6 pm

Th e mornmg sta rs are
Saturn , Juptter, Mars, Ven us
and Mercury
There are no evemng sta rs

Pet ~ r· s

o nd

approaching

Those born on thts date are
under the sign o f Ltbra
Elcmor Roosevelt, w1fe of

mnto,,

UAG I-f!

•

fA l l ~olt•
Mr11
JO or•d '17
looV 1• I

\lA f(l~Afl

afte r 5 pm
VA FHA 30 yr frn ancmg Ireland
M ortg age 77 E Sta te Athe ns
949 2571
_. ,~ 1967 NO VA b cyl E~tro clean
phone (61 4) 592 305 ~ _
SEVEN BEAGLE puppoes to gov@
$500 1971 Hondo CB 350 e~
away 0 weeks old wormed
( ellen! condl tt on $500 Three 2
STOR Y 3 bedr oom frame
949 2079
rarl motorcycle trader , brand
house FA fu rnoce §!Orm wtn
~---new $350 949 2526
dows ftreploce tn M tdd lepor t
FREE TO goOd home I mo le whole
- - - - -Phone 992 3457
adorable Sp1 1z puppy 9 weeks - WESTINGHOUSE UPRIGHT 18 cu ,
-~
old 992 30 18
It freezer new 3 lea1her SIX ROOM house at 613 Mtll St
- - - -~
10 cke ts
stze
42
new 1 M tddlepor t Good con dttton In
ADORABLE G RAY kollen needs
snokespeare Wonderbow 55
q u1re at 439 l rnca ln St Mtd
good home Jayne Hoef ltch
9CI
_lb 1es_1 992 7205
__ even1ngs
2 5291
~~~ --~----,SEARS wood burntn g
heotmg MUST SELL thrs 3 bedroom 2 1
AKC PO ODLE pupp1es 1 male l
sto11e Sl50 Coll9 49 2253
both spirt Ioyer w rtn all the ex
fema le 8· weeks old SiS
-~ - - trof. I Pmed tar below act ual
Sl 125 HONDA on oil rood mo lar
99'1 34q3 or 992 33q1
real es ta te value for qu1 c ~
cyde
E11cellen t condt t ton
TO GtVE Away AKC reg ts tered
sole i Ntce dr t"'e to power
949 2219 any ltmEI'
mole Schnauzer s.all and pep
plonts $44 000 992 2492
per Female black Schnauzer HOOVE R SWEEPER 520 Good
NEW ONE year old brle\lel home
s.hape 997 5501
type l 1Hie mixed breed 1on
3 bedroo m 1 1 1 both garage
PtJP Mo le ptJppy ht1l l poodle WHITE 6.6 1nch 5terlong ktl chen
rec
r ealton room 1 1 ocre!.
hall col Ire 742 3162
sonk und w 1th fl)u cet 11 6 cu It
Ea_yle~_!49
27~ --avocado
Frogodoore
AKC REGISTERED block and to n
SEVEN
YEAR
old
house
3 acres 6
r
elr
tge
r
otor
Wht!
e
G
E
fem al e Cocker Spontel $1 00
rooms ond both 1 mile fr om
double O'len
sl o11e
wllh
For
stu d
servrce
AKC
Ches ter Pr rced tar qu1ck sol e
rott sserre 949 2788
reg1sl €lfed black and Jon mole
985 3950
Cocker Spaniel show qualtty

PARTS FOR 1971 Galaxoe Ford for
sale Ph one 992 5B58

1ng the week
weekends

--=

HOOF HOLLOW Horses Bu y sell
trade or tro Jn New and used
sadd les Horse Shoerng Ruth
Reeves Alba ny (61 4l 698 ~2~~

.~~-

CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) New
PU6liC NOT I CE
T ne annual elecl ron of th e
Mergs County AgrtCVIIura l
Soc tety D trectcrs w rt l be held
T hu r sday No,e-mber 3 1977
at 1!1e Off1c:e o f rne Meogs
County CommoSSI Oflers m the
Cou rt ~ouse a1 P ome r ooy
Ohro fr om 5 to 9 p m
Ou.allf rcatrons tor dtrecto r s
are !har they must be a
qualtf oed voter of Me gs
Counly anCl must have a
membersll tp t 1 c~et rn Sdld
50CJ€ 1y Of 1977
Caod tdates oetlttons mus t
be f rie d w ofh 'he Secretary no
later than 5 o rn Tnursday ,
November 3
1977
Only
persons hol d rng membersho p
t tc kers at the close of !he 1977
County Fa tr or a 1 l east [ 15 J
calendnr da ys be f ore the date
Ci f e1eclton are qua!ofred to

Dt

WA NTEO OLD ptonos dnpo co nd1
tt on Po'( qlg $1 0 and S25 each
Fu s1 tl oor only h. pert movmg,
Full v msured co moorJ)' Wrt le
gt ~&gt;o ng
dtrec tr ons
WrtJen
Pronos Box 188 Sordts Ohto
~3Q40 , Phone (0 14 ) 483 1605

SKATE A WAY S c h~dule Hollo
ween Party Sot
Ocl 29th
Races Pr oz es Bal loons
Open Wed Frr o11d Sot nrles
7 JO
10 00
A voJl oble l or
prova te portoe5
Mon Tues
Thu rs no tes Sot or Sun alter
nocns
Bu s trons porlot oo n
concerled Pl-.on e q95 39"]Q or

SCORPIO (Cc l 24- Now 22) Use
vour ontu! l ton toda y• You re very
qtlted tn th1s respe-ct But war~
horn behtnd the scenes to avo td
Pre rosi&lt;, ol ot.hers not un detstand
tng

1

\ 1r s I Rdldcrson

Call 'Nl ":.IJb~
l JJ6 851U

FAR AWAY-

•

o lr, ,~P"

h11 '&gt;1ondonq

NO II t:.M TOO l01 ge or too :.moll
Wtll bu y 1 ptcce or coil1 plere
household N e w used o r on1 1
que:. Mart rns Futn tture 10 N
1nd St
Mtddlepor 1 Phone
9Q2 b3 70

lHf:RE WILL be no hun tr ng no
rr e.sposstng ond no ext::ep tro ns
on my propertpo Bob McGrow

t i&lt;Ht ~e

SAGlTT ARIUS (Nov 23·0ee
21) Get nvotved wrt tl large
OfgO\nrzaitOr\S today You tt be a
welcome adartron rn all respec 1s
except those wh 1c n dea l Wltn
hand ftng thetr assets

!'• •~

QQ1 71b0

CAPRICORN (Doc 22 -Jon. 19)

\l etzer and granddaul!.hter.

spPn t

so tong as

tal-.e th1ngs ca lml v and rn

S!ft,je Tnm i"Our sailS W&lt;!tl rl the
wmd tS do" n momentartly
In

poou~

f~•OP'-!

0 10 I URNI IURE o(o&gt; bou•.., bra;&gt;~
ho·d~
ett
(0 mpletc
households Wt tlt' M 0 Molle.,r
Rt .J Pome~a y Ohro 01 call

JONES BOYS
NOW OPEN
9-'A.M.·til 9 P.M.

Bernice Bede Osol

HJ t

1\ 1 r t Hcu1t'&gt;y

l • Cllllltflt•d

THE

ASTRO•GRAPH

•

•

'OU~

p,, ,,,,,o~

.Business Services__

I~AV!l

1

IH It • otooll l~&gt;nt&lt;. wot • d
l"\ol•ll~·ll'
''"'do lo tu•
(\til
•Nl ). ~ )1 ,loytnow uo Q~/ J~HU
ltod o 1

TELEVISION
VIEWING

ARE SICK .
THE DAY OF LEOAL
RECKONING CAr-IT BE

-...•''

1"..-tpupmt·nt

MO ::d0U~A

l&lt;J!J

,.,,, 1 rilL,,,,&gt; 1~. .. , rhtc&gt;nl wr,, o t.OI N '!o CU NWlNCY t (l i..~n" olrl
•~Cll l
pu on !ony uo yt...-e thor
P'-'' 1..,•1 •~ottht'' or•d (hou1~
~p•• l &gt;\II ,~l.o"t.'OIIC' \'Fj'5'{tl"tltri!·t.:, l'!, l~ o•r and q&lt;old WP !lt-..e-d 1"/0J
Chr ... rona~ I dt.• Pt'&gt;rt• ll d~ o"d
and oldet .. d,,pr CO Ul~ Buy $ell
lOIIl1 ~\ op;:-~ ~o?osonob 1,. , olio?~
or 11 ode&gt; Col i R og~&gt;&lt; Wom'&gt;lf&gt;y
l .:t 11 Su., ol QQ2 1066
l .J) 1331

, • .,_,

, , Ill iCIT I

For Wedne•day. Oct

I

•\IU

Q,-.,,i \..,,, ,, ~ b,•,l
1,,, ng ~... ,!.• Ruth

1 IILJ' •1

'~'•'t

1 •'•~ !I

"I

'"'"-f

t

~· I

IIL'clh

'N} JJ IL)

\,)\

ull "'u ~ . '- u"d
lllubolt
h c•n ~o•'

l l\ ::-,t1 pond k"

o.JtT~•rort•.~n

"it•ll

&lt;.ampul~;!

Barkl ey 6 ; 12 ·0Cl-Janakl 33.

12 ·40--Movle "Count~rtelt Green'
Squad 6, 1 oo- Tomorrow ] , 4

'I

••

I.

P 1.n1

)

'1 00°

0

On All

TRADE-IN

living Room SUites

·' MASON FURNITURE

Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sal.-8: 30 ttl5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM
773-5592

Herman Grate

.----....

C) 1977 Kml F'outur"'' S~nd o r. l r lnt

Mason ,

W. Va .

WHILE·u-WAIT

.

I HAVE A
5URPRI§£

FOI!. I{OU

I'VE DECIDEI7
I{()U SJ.lOULI7
6ECOME A

VEGETARIAN~

l WAS ONLli

KIDDING .. 14ERE'5

'lOUR REAL SUPPER.

CLE~ING

WHAT A ROTTEN

JOKE ~ M~ HEART

15

STILL POUNDING '

.•

PRESSING
.#%. ~

STEP INTA iH' 60011-1,

FIJDDSY, I'L.L HAVE 'fER
SLJIT READ'I IN A FEW

1

MINUTES.

�---------------------------1

12- Tile Daily Sentinel. MtddleP&lt;'rt-P••llt'r••) .ll . '1\~&lt;•sd.t) . tll'l 11.1'';;

! -.-~ Area Deaths

Ualuts Galort

.I,.,......ii
U

I

OMER HESS
Orner Hess . 85 , Da lton ,
Cltl io, formerly oi (/lerry
R idg~ . died Sunday evening

from .

at

~

Wooste r

-

,.

~

l

CLEARASIL

ALCOHOL

Reg. Or Vanishing

Isopropyl

.65 oz . Tube

16 oz Pam eco

52c.Va lu e

33¢

·

F .J. P . Price ...

Mr Hess was born Nov . 24.
1891. the son of the late
Willi am and lov inna Fox
Hess. He was also preceded
1n deafh by?'" infant son. two
brothers and two sisters . Mr .

Hess was -a member-of World

Wide Church of God .
He is su rvi ved by his wife .
Dorothy Randall jHess ; the
foll owi ng children , Jun e
Risley , and Drexel Hess.

Burbank . Ohio ; Eldred Hess ,
Dalton, Oh io ; Prent ice Hess,
Perrysv ille. Ohio ; Bertlme
Saine ,· "Des Moines , Iowa ;

Dorrence

Giant Si1e
1~

Hess ,

Clinton ,

Ohio ; one sister . Lett i e
Midk iff, Beaverton . Mich .;
two brothers, Pearl Hess ,
1\.Aarion , and Chalmer Hess .
Canada ; 25 grandchildren ,
seven
grea t .grandc:,hildren
and several nieces and
nephews .
Funeral services will be
Wednesday at 1: 30 p . m . at
Ewing Chapel wi .th Joh n
Foster officiating . Burl al wilt

TIDE
49 oz . -

Community

HospitaL

:~;~.:a!~: . . 85~
Off

~ ~\~. :arll~: $139

:-;:-,;:.••

be

in

Cherry

Ridge

Cemetery . Fr.lends may ca ll
at the funera l home at
any ti me . The ·f amily requests
no flowe~S .

·•

..

: Nob~l

SAMUEL E. !&lt;A ETZEL
The Rev . Samuel E.
Kaetzel passed away on Oct.
10
at
Copeland
Oaks
Retirement HOme. Sebring,
Ohio , A retired United
.Method ist . minister,
he
served as pas tor for a
num~r of years of Bethany

CEPACOL

Methodisf

Antiseptic

Pomeroy

and

Church

In

Forest

Run

Methodist Church .

STAYFREE
Maxi pads

He was preceded in death
by ·'his par ents , seve r al
brot hers and sisters ; his f irst
Wife, Agnes Kaetzel , and his
second wife, Bertha Miller
Kaetzel , a native of Pomeroy
who passed away at Copeland
Oaks on Feb. 4, 1917.
He is surv ived by one son,
the Rev . Sa m uel KaetzeL who
has ~n involved for. many

48's
Admiral.

I
I

In Cambridge, van Vleck
years m m•ss•o,ary work in
Afri ca ; c1nd two daughters, • said today his winning a
Esther Kaetzel, Cleveland , share of the physics prlze was
and Mrs . Robert (Esther )
Wlexpected_ "This thing is a
Treg1er, Erie, Pa .
cvmplete surprise to me, " he
~mor i al services tor The
Rev , Kaehel will be held at
said .
the Copeland Oaks Chapel on
Tuesdar , Oct , 17 with in --

termen on Oc t. q In the
Caledonia. Ohio ceme!!ry .

Eighty
Struble, Nelle Werner and
Bernadine Meier .
Oonors were :
POMEROY
Robert
Va ughan . Walter Couch .
George
Nash ,
Pe1r lcla
vaughan . Frank vaughan .
Pam
Vaughan ,
Jack
Sahyonne, Geri Walton , Jane
Walton . Janet Ambrose ,
Mary Starcher , Jeffrey
Hilleary . Harlan Wehrung ,
Deborah Grueser, Mar y
Myers, Rev_. William Middleswarth, Wtll lam Radford ,
Patty Barton , Linda Wyatt,

Nancy J.effers , Marjor ie

Reufer , Denis Gilmore , Mike
Bendlnelll. Bruce Cleland ,
Ann Grycza . Dolores Will ,
B1lly Spencer , E . Jenne
Brown ,

Homer

Van
leek retired from
IA!aching in 196g but still
maintains an o ffice at
Harvard University.
Van Vleck said that
although Anderson studied
for his docto~~ under him at
Harvard, the three winners
·•never
really
work ed
toge ther. " He said their
research was separate but
related .
_
After gaining his bachelor's
de
.
gree at the Umversity of
Wisconsin and his doctorate
at Harvard, \'an Vleck began
his research " in 1927 and I've
be
en publishing papers on it
for almost 50 years. The
. ,eaJ;!ier work tends to be the
most inlportant. "
1 k nd hi
·.f
~an. V ec a
s. wt e,
Abtgml, celebrated thetr 50th
wedding anniversary in June.
They have no children .

Baxter ,

Isabel Couch , Dorothy Oliver ,
Virgil K. Windon , M ichael
Wr ight , Leo Vaughn , Leo

Vaughn II. Ola St. Clair ,
Debbie Buck , John W. Am RUTLAND - · HOMER
PARKER . ......
MINERSVILLE Alice
Jacobs , Caroiyn A. Charles ,
Stacy Arnold , Janet E . Hill.

MIDDLEPORT -

Nor ma

Wilcox , Pat Craig , Kathryn
Oenison , Joyce V. Bartrum.
Sarah Fowler , Steven Craig ,
Freda Durham , Brenda

Haggy , Ernest Haggy , June
Kloes, Marty Ha cke tt , Connie
Dodson . James Whitla ch.
Cl ara J . F r ance, Roger
Manley, Sandra K. Tavlor,
James R. Dailey , Debbie
Carder , M ike Mull em .

RACINE - William H.
Hobach, Dorothy M. Soyre.
Martha Lou Beegle.
SY RACUSE - Cheryl J .
Abbott, Ka thy Cum m ings,
McGrath ,

Howard

LANGSVILLE -

!

Vaseline

M y_ers.

J•1MI1&lt;0)i

~ . . __,

MASON - Phyl lis Knopo .
REEDSVILLE - Linda

99¢

15 oz . Reg .

. , ..... \

$1.79 Value

__ [

·-

F.I.P. Price

·

Searles .

Bath Beads

... n. . s•'• '-... '

Par ker .

Ell is E .

CHESTER - Carol .Erwin .
CHESHIRE- Charles W.

VASELINE IC

W ilson , Bernard Shrivers.
Mar ie Probed , Richard
Barton , Ma cel Barton , ........

QUALITY
COLOR T.V.

GALLI POLIS - Rebe.c ca
Meaige .
EWINGTON - Robert S.'

BUY NOW

money miser memos

Plac ier .

AND SAVEl
DIVORCE ASKED
Kaaron
K.
Hatfield,
Middleport, has filed suit for
divorce from Charles D.
-HaUield, Columbus, in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court .

~
_.,.......
. ....... ···;:..

--·

""-···-~ ~......
..:~;.::;;;. .

-..-....

~--.,.,.

---

-...____.;.---· ~

COLGATE

LISTERIN£
ANTISEPTIC
14 oz .

$1.~ Value
F .I.P. Prltee ...

•

To~thpaste
5 oz. - 10&lt;: Oft

89¢

$1 .15 Value
F.I.P. Price ...

69¢

Liquid Detergent
22 oz. - 13C .Off

Lab~l

~~;~_'~:~~: . . 79¢

being improved to provide
another location for children
to play, asked CoWlcilman
Kelly to check with the post to
see·if it would lease the park
the town. That way, the
wwn could spe.nd money on
improving the facility and
provide police protection for
it more readily.
Cou ncilma n Allen King
said there are too many
heavy trucks passing through
town.
He
urged
lhe
enforcement of an ordinance
which
forbids
heavy
" througll'' truck traffic. He
said residents of Middleport
cannot affocd to maintain
streets torn up by such
traffic . _
He also discussed d,aining
oo Middleport Hill and areas .
that he considers dangerous
w motor1St:n m the hill. The
safety committee and the
may or will check them.
· Council moved into exec-utive
session before adjourning.
Attending were Mayor
Hoffman, Clerk-Treasurer
Grate, and council members,
Kelly, King, William Walters,
Carl Horky and Horton .

w

Hospital News
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted - Ully Adams,
Long Bottom; PhyUis Cline,
Pomeroy ; Gene ·Oiler,
Middleport; Edna Stiles,
Pomeroy ; William Stevens,
Kanauga ; Edith Bickers ,
Racine; Helen Slack, Racine;
Ric.h ard Gilkey , Middleport;
Verdie Keefer; Leon, W. Va. ;
Rolland Smith, Middleport ;
Richard Smith, Long Bottom; Shai Nobel, Pomeroy ;
Alleyne Rees,
Racine ;
Gertrude Woods, Middleport.
Discharged
Leona
Hubbard , Grace Whaley ,
Tonda Walker .
Holzer Medical-Center
(Discharges, Pel. 10)
Anthony
Cana day ,
Christopher Casto, Harold
Dailey, Harold Gibbs, Janelle
J enkins , . Mrs ,
Safl/uel
Loganacre and daughter ,
Robert Ludlum, Robert
Schoffler, Sr ., Romona
Smith, Phyllis Stinson , Bobbl
Sturgill , Henry Taylor,
Elizabeth Welsh, Barbara
Workman.
(Births, Od. 10)
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Smith,
a daughter, Middleport.
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES Mrs .
Oden Austin, Point Pleasitrit ;
Uoyd Durst, Cottageville;
Mrs . Lloyd Burk, Galllpolis;
Herbert Walla ce, . Point
Pleasant ; Jeffrey Patterson ,
Jr ., Point Pleasant: Mark
Hurlow, Point Pleasant ; Mrs.
James Walker, Southside ;
Robin 'Bond, Mason ; Sandy
Davis, Glenwood;
and
J anetta Roush, Mason.

Honda
(Continued from paae ll
manufacturing auwmobiles
py expanding the--plantsite,"
said Kawashima.
Attending the news confer-

ence

TALKS TO RESUME
CHILLICOTHE, Oh io
(UPI ) - Negotiations on a
new three-year wage contract are scheduled to resume
Wedn'esday
bet\ve~n
Wearever Alwninum Co. and
striking members of Local
110 of the Aluminum Workers
Union .

were . Democra tic

legislative leaders, who were
singled out for profuse praise
by Rhodes ; the entire state
Controlling Board; Union
County co mmissioners i
Mayor Clifwn H. Brown of
Marysville ; City Manager
Richard
Roberts
ot
Marysville; and Alfred G.
Cochran, chairman of the
TRC board.
Kawashima was joined by ~,­
four other Honda officials in
making the announcement.
He said Ohio was selected for
the p!ant site "after weighing
and • balancing numerous

UNCLE SAM
MmS
THE
DEPOSIT

DAWN

Middleport

brose, Carl F . Hendr i cks Jr .,
Jan K. Holter Oavis .

LONG BOTTOM - Tom my

~

The Gallia - Meigs Post
Slate Highway Patrol announced today that motorcycle driver tests will be
given a t two locations
Monday, Oct . 17.
Tests will be given from
9:30 to 11 :30 a.m . at the Ohio
Department of
Transportation Building north of
Chester in Meigs County and
from I to 4 p.m. at the Public
Use Area in GaUipolis .
Persons are asked to call
the Ohio State Patrol for
appointments.

Robe_t;IFetty. Gera ld Rought ,

Rex F . Cummings .

r;"

Motorcycle
tests scheduled

Treaty

•

Bridge repair
under review

"Cuba' is the Soviet anchor
in the Caribbean in defiance
of the Monroe · Doctrine,"
Moorer said, and warnt;&lt;~:
" Do not be surprised - if
this treaty is ratified in lts
pre~nt form - w see a
Soviet and or Cuban presence
quickly established · in the
country of Panama."
Zwnwalt, former chief of
naval operations,
acknowledged me )IOS.!Iibillty
the Soviet Union may win
power over me canal, but he
argued that rejection of the
controversial treaties was
more likely w' increase Sovlet
influence than to hinder it. :"The loudest cheers will be
in Havana and· Moscow" if .
the treaties are rejected,
Zwnwalt told the committee.
He added:
" I believe it is possible the
Soviet Union wlll have control
over the canal as U.S.
military
continues
to
deteriorate. But I believe it
will take them longer to gain
control" if the treaties are
approved .
•

.

CHARLESTON , W. Va .
(UPI ) - State and federal
highways olficia~ met today
to discuss Inspections made
on lhe Silver Memori a l
Brldge at Point Pleasant to
determine .the cause of its 16
fractures and when it may he
reopened.
Highways Commissioner
Charles Miller said the .
session is one of several
meellng s loca l highways
officia ls ha ve had with
representat ives of the
Federal Highways Administration . I' our F'HA .
officlals from the.Washington
research office and two from
the Charleston . o ffi &lt;~e arc
attending the meeting .
-•
"The FHA folks are here at
our invltatlon and request to
offer whatever assistance
they may be able to offer as

CAMPGROUND CLOSED
Iron Ridge Campground in
Lake
Vesuvius
the

.

fa r as ex pertise is conMiller said the team's woi·k
cerned ," said Miller,
should
be
COJTiple ted
''We 're looking at results or ' sometime today.
detailed insp ectio n s,
Asked when the bridge
providing an overview of wo.u ld be open, Miller said,
repa irs that have been made " Just as soon as I possibly
to date," he said . In addition, can consistent with safety ."
the experts are doing
The Silver Memorial
engineering analyses of any Bridge was built in 1970 to
additional work which needs replace the Silver Bridge
to be done on the Span based which fell into the Ohio River
on the inspeetions .
just prior to Christmas 1967,
Unofficial reports by work- killing 46 people. It was
men on the scene indicate closed earlier thi s year when
repairs will be completed this cracks were found to have
weekend.
formed in some of the span's
Miller said the specific weld joints.
objectiv~s of the discussions
A ferry has been operating
are : •·first of all , safety; the in the vicinity on an ofr-andsecond of which is service to on basis since.
get the t hing back in
operation; and the third is to
evaluate, lest and analyze,
pursuant to findin g the ca use
of the problem ."

fNews ..-..in Brief~

Recreation Area, Lawrence

By United Press lnt.e malional
WASHINGTON - MI,IL IONS OF POOR, ELDERLY,
disabled and unem ployed per sons may be deprived of federa l
benefits if Congress fails to enact appropriations for the Labor
and HEW departmenls this week, officials report . The $60.1
bllllon Labor-HEW approprialions measure has been stymied
in Congr ess since J uly 13 because House and Senate conferees
cannot agree on the issue of federal subsidies for abortions.
Both Health, Educations and Welfare Secr etary J oseph
Califano and Labor Secretary Ray Marshall a ppealed to
Congress in separate · le].ters Tuesday to ·pass the
appropriations bill to enact a resolution to permit continued
spending meanwhile .

LODGE TO MEET
Pomeroy Chapter 80, Royal
Arch Masons, will meet in
regular session, at 7:30 p. m .
Wednesday at the temple. A
meetlng of Bosworth CoWicll
46 , Royal and Select Masters,
will be held at 8: I~ p. m .
Wednesday.

WASHI NGTON - AGRICULTURE SECRETARY Bob
Berglan9 has asked Congress to authorize a flexible new
government farm mortgage syslem to he lp young, low-incm)le
and minority (amilies gel a start in farn1ing.
Bergland outlined his ·pian to a Senate agriculture
subcommittee Tuesday as part or a package of proposed
changes in Agriculture ~partmenl farm and rural develop·
ment credit programs. The proposal also included a request to
double e&lt;isting ceilings on individual farm mortgage and
operating loans insured and guaranteed by the department's
Fanners Home Administration , ~ nd a plan which would result
in raising interest rates for many, flirme r-borrowers .

LOCAL TO MEET
A s pecial m eeting of
Bricklayers Local Union 32
will be held at 7 p. m. Wednesday at the Meigs Inn,
Pomeroy.

. FRANKFURT, WEST GERMANY - A CZECH couple
who hijacked a Clechoslovak Airline jetliner with 29 people
aboard to Frankfurt seeking political asylun1 will stand tr ial in
Germany, - a uthorities say. The man and woma n, whose
identities were not r eleased, surrendered to police without
incldent after hijacking the Soviet-made Yak-40 airliner at
gunpoint and forcing it to land in Frankfurt Tuesday . They told
police they ·acted out of political motives.
But German authorities, determined to fight all forms of
terrorism because their own country has been shaken by
recent terrorists attacks, Said the couple wo,uld be put on trial.
"It is certa in charges will be preferred against the m,"
Frankfurt Police Oef Knut Mueller said . " They have

ASK TOWED

A marriage license was
issued to Benjamin Leonard
Dowell, Jr., 23, Middleport,
and Kimberly Sue Doweil, 21,
Middleport.

ELBERFELD$

committed a serious crime ."

WOMEN'S READY TO WEAR, 2ND FLOOR
•'

Dress

"'About Town

THE MOON CRUISED INTO PO!SIT!ON TODAY to block
out the s un and bring darkness in the afternoon to much of the
Western Hemisphere. The conjunction will cause a partial
eclipse, of varying degree, throughout the United Slates ,
inchxling Hawaii and Alaska, Mexico and Central America
and much of Canada and northern South America .
Scientists set sail days ago for the long, thin strip of t he
~cific Ocean where the . eclipse is total. It a ngles
southeastward from the North Pacific, passing just north of
the Hawaiian islands and exten"ds for 700 miles into central
Continued on page 14

VOL. XXVIII

NO. 126

6' oz.

~~;~.:·;~~: . . 69¢

Just send your deposit along with YQUr
deposit slip by U.S. mail and we'll mail
you your receipt the next day. With
today's busy world time is of the essence.
so let Uncle Sam's letter carrier do the
chore for you. When you have time we
wi II enjoy seeing you.

EARTH BORN
Baby Shampoo
8 oz.
$1 .86 Value
F.I.P. Price ...

99¢
~. · .~:~:~:. ¢
99

Homecoming acltvlltes
for Metgs High School will
gel underway 'Thursday at
7:30p.m. with a parade and
snake dance _ led by the
band from the Pomeroy
parking lot l.o the football
fteld parking lot hehlnd the
Senior Citizens Ce nter .
A pep rally and bonfire
will be held there wf lh the
football ·pla yers, band and
cheerleaders participating.
All ~ !r igs Marauder laos

are

h!

•

L:::.;.:_____ F
_ .t___,
.P. Price .. :

VAPORETIE

.~l"-'1
.~

.....

.._f\_6

.. THE
·FRIENDLY BANK"

MIRfi

Flea Collar
P1

$1 .00 Value
F.I.P. Price ...

59¢
'

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
M em ber Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation
-

DEPOSITS INSURFD Tfl

t ~0,000

Approximately 36 parents,
nine teachers, and Principal
James Diehl heard Meigs
High School Guidance . per-

sonnel

meet across from Sears on
the upper parking · lot In
Pomeroy .
:::::::::;:;:::::;:::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::·:;:·:;:::;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;

Weather

OFFICE CLOSING
The offlce of the F anners
Home Administration wiU be
closed the afternoon of the
18th and aU day on the 19th
and 20th due to out of town
meetings.

•

Nine Dimensions
or
guidance, 1 ' that is, nine areas
of involvement.with students,

11

se rvices

paren ts , teachers, and
community.
Principal Diehl described a

"Principal's Coffee Hour"
which the group hopes to help
la un ch soon , Tentatively
pla nned for each week, t hese
tnfonnal meetings of approxlmately 20 parents would
be intended to encourage
more parents to coJI\e into
and to become familiar with
the schools' programs.
In other PAT . business,
President Carol Kennedy

Ten forfeited
bonds to court ·

cheer the Marauders on for
their
Friday
night
Homecoming bottle wltb
the Waverl y Tigers.
A\7 p. m. the band is lo

Clearing and cold tonight,
scattered light frost, lows in
the mid 30s. Sunny Thursday,
hi g hs in th e upper 50s.
Probability of precipitation
6() percent today a nd 10
percent tonight and Thursda y.

explain

Martha Vennari, and John
Redovian described the

provided by that department
at a PAT meeting at the high
school Tuesday night.
Counselors Tim Flesher;

!ted to. attend and

CLASS-REUNITED - Two of the three members of
the class of 1927 at Letart Falls High School (long since
close d) got together recently at the home of their teacher,
Miss Bonnie Brown, in McArthur. Standing are Clare
Carpenter of Belpre and Mrs. Wiima (Roush ) Sargent of
Middleport .

Ten defendants forfeited
bonds in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Cia renee Andrews
Tuesday night.
They were Henry Price,
Long Bottmn, $30 posted on ·
speeding charges; . Joe
Layne, Shelbina , -Ky ., $50,
Intoxication ; Gregory Roush,
New Haven, $50, open flask;
Coy Nitz, Pomeroy, $50, intoxication; Basil Hayes ,
Pomeroy, -$50, disorderly
conduct; Ralph . Mei ~t er ,
Dexter, $30, speeding ;
William O'Donnell, Pomeroy,$350, driving while intoxicated ; . Thomas Tucker,
Pomeroy, $25, speeding;
Danny Hood, Pomeroy, $25,
speeding, and Deana Peck, ·
Cheshire, $25, speeding.

..

Harold Sargent, Middleport, School in !!JOB. Hel' salary was
and Carpenter resides irl $40 per month. She took bothBelpre.
•
her preparatory work and her
Learning tha t Miss Brown college degree at Rio Grande
now lives in McArthur, the College.
·
·
'two remaining members of · She taught a t Letart Falls
t he class decided it would be High School from 11i22 until
Miss Brown was teacher I interesting to have a 50-year 1931, and also at Chester,
and P . C. Luh was the reunion. So they and their Tuppers Plains and Cheshire.
teaching principal when this spouses visited her at her Her subjects were Latin,
class was in the three-year home where they enjoyed English and Commerce.
rConcerning the other two
high - school. It was a very dinner ~ nd a n afternoon of
members of the class, after
small class, having only three rem iniscing.
members, Wilma Roush ,
Miss Brown was horn near graduating from high school,
Clarence -Barnes and Clare Creol~, Swan Townsh ip, Mrs . -Sargent .attended
1
Caq)en ter .
Barnes
is Vinton County, and began Mountain · State Bu siness
deceased. Wilma is now Mrs . · tea ching at th e Silyerly College in Parkersburg. Sh_e
was employed in the office of
the Meigs County Superintendent of Schools for · 37
years. Since retirement she is
busy with volunteer work and
CHARLESTON , W. Va . , R e publican
turned oth~( dulles and hob(UPI) - West Virginia Gov . Democrat, first entered bies . River boat ca ptain
Jay Rockefeller, who has politics in 1966, after moving Carpenter was r etired from
refused since he flrst enter ed here as a rural ·poverty Union Barge Line Corpolitics in 1966 to S&amp;y how . worker .
He
refused poration in 1972. For 42 years
much money he has , disclosure requests at that he worked on river towboats,
disclosed Tuesday that he is tim~ and through two 32 as master-pilot. He is
worth $19.7 million.
gubernatorial elections; the married to the former Mabel
Rockefeller ·told reporters second of which he won .
Lowe, and they have one
at a news conference he made
daught~r and three sons..
the disclosure because he felt
Since retirement, he is active
CALL ANSWERED •
ln c ivic organizations in
politicians should reveal their
I
The
M i d d I e p I' r t Belpre.
worth pu\&gt;licly and because
As to the question about t he
hi s Wife, Sharon, wHI' face a Emergency squad answered
·senate confirnlation hearing a call to Route 4, Pomeroy, at morning glories blooming· o n
today on her appointment -to 7:45 p. m. Tuesday for Gary · the tomato stakes at Letart
the P ubli c Broadcast ing Hysell . who wa~ taken to FaDs, Miss Brown 's class
Veterans Memorial Hospital. was '.'not prepared." They
Board.
Mrs. Rockefeller, daughter At 3:58 a . m. Wednesday the were n 't sure about the
.of Sen. Charles Per cy , R-111., Middleport Fire Department morning· glori&lt; '" 1 :uch of
may have to make a public answered a mutual aid call to the rich bottom land that
disclosur e of her wea lth at Shenang Springs on .fioute 7 produced tomatoes, cabbages
to assist the Pomer oy F'ire and potatoes 50 years ago is
the Senate hearings.
Department in a fire t here. now in sa nd and gravel pits. ·
Rockef elle,r ,

a

Rocky IV worth $19.7 million ·

TONI TODD
Seen at all the best places ... always po ised and
ve~y impressive. Toni T~ dd ' s smas h in g one ·piece

t un ic-look dress wi th detachable bra id -banded
scar f, skinny se lf-belt. In po ly inte rl ock knif , ma c hi ne was h-dry. Camel top wit h Black or Brow n
s ki rt . 6- 16.
·-

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

MEIGS HIGH QUEEN CANDIDATES - Five senl?r girls at Meigs High School want to

be homecoming queen . She will be crowned in pre-game ceremonies Friday evening at 7:30
at Meigs Stadiwn in Pomeroy: Candidates are, front 1-r, Velvet Swisher, daughter of Mr .
and MrS. Bill SwiSher, to be escorted by Tony Venoy , and Rhonda Hudson, da ughter (Of Mr .
and Mrs. Paul Hudson , escorted by Gary Basham; back , Kim Krautter, daughter of Mr . and
Mrs. Karl Krautter , to be escorted by Kevin Mc Laughlin ; Susan Wright, daug hter of Mr.
and Mrs. George Wright, to be escorted by Bob Seelig, and Hobin Rathburn, daughter of Mr .
an~ Mrs. Bobby Joe Rathburn, who will J escorted by Ric~ Blevins.

.\o·

•

appointed a committee to
work out -details of National
Education .Week observance,
whicll, is- November 13-19.
· Spirited discussion before
and after the program cent ered on tiie topics of
availability of Guidance t esting results, career
counseling, drug and alcohol
policies,
school
dance
chaperoning, and Math and
Reading levels of high school
student~.

The next PAT meeting is
scheduled Nov . 8 at 7:30p.m .
ln the high school. School
attendance policies, school
rules, and the student handbook will· be discussed,

Pomeroy close to E-R drive goal ·

Morning glories in Letart
LETART FALLS - "Do
the morn ing glories still
, bloom on t_h e tomato stakes at
Letart? ,' ' Miss Bonnie Brown
.asked the Letart Falls High
School class of 1927 during its
50th anniversary reunion.

Southern High
Soph ties for
. dging .first .
JU

?

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Meigs High counselors
explain guidance wor"

remembered by Bonnie.

"We are extremely pleased
to welcome Honda to Ohio,"
said Rhodes. " We will do
everything possilile to assist
them in their first American
manufacturing venture.

RACINE - Rlck F)agg,-a
sophomore Voc-Ag student at
Southern High School here,
son of Mr. and Mrs. David
Flagg, had the highest score
in the District Soil judging
contest held Oct. 4, according
to Aaron Sayre, FFA advisor.
In a five-way tie for first,
Rick scored a total of 290
points out of a )l(&gt;ssible 300.
There were 200 students in
.
the contest.
Rlck was part of !he Racine
Soll judglog team whlch
placed sixth in the district .
other m embers of the team
and their scores were Bob
Lee , 270, Deanna White 203
and. one third, and Albert
Holman 167 and two thirds.
Members of the FF A are
thanking the Federal Land
Bank which sponsored the
event and provided awards .

WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 12, 1977

Parade, snake
dan ce, rally to
open homecoming

here," said Kawashima.

.WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
. AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGSSTo_7 P.M.

en tine

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

'

"Our decision to locate in
Ohio has stemmed from our
long-standing desire to
launch
manufacturing
activities in the United
States, coupled with Ohio's
efforts to eQ!:ourage us to
establish industrial facilities

Lotion

•

•

e

...

County, is closed because of
tornado damage which occurred on . Oct. 2. It will
remain closed until next
spring so that the many winddamaged trees can be
removed and other damage
can he repaired.
.
All campgrounds in the
Lake Vesuvillll Recreation
Area are now closed .

undetermined but it was believed to hav.e started in a storage and furnace
room at the side of the -structure . Bill (Skinny) Lehew was operator of the
club and the building was owned by the Ace High Music Co. of Point
Pleasant . Ther e was no insurance on the building or its contents. Most
firemen had left the scene by about 6:~0 a.m. Wednesday but Pomeroy
firemen were there after 9 a . m .

.

~'*'~,~~ ~~'""'~~::=~:::;:;;;:&gt;.~;:;.~i~:~~:::~=~~:::::«o!:-~:-::::».\."=:::::::::::::;::.."~')~~~

economic and other factors.''

DERMASSAGE

THE SHENANGS SPRINGS NITE CLUB on Route 7 north ,of
Pomeroy was gutted by fire about 3:45a.m . today . Pomeroy firemen on
the scene were assisted by tankers from Rutland and Chester and Fire
Departments and the Middleport Fire Department was a lso. on the scene
with a lanker and other equipmenl. Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles Legar
said that
. losses were expecte d to exeeed $30,000. Cause of the fire was

The Pome~y Elementary Mrs. George Warner a nd
Squad is within $2,000 of its Gordon, Mr. and Mrs. Bennie
$13,500 goal in fund drlve to Perry, Mr . a nd Mrs. Leo
gather funds for the purchase Curtis, Mr . and Mrs. Harold
of a new emergency vehicle. H. Smlth, Mr . and Mrs. ArWith the goal in sight, the thur Price; Gertrude Mit·new vehicle has been ordered chell ,' Mr. and Mrs. Emerson
and is expected t o be Poo ler, Trinity Church
delivered in Pomeroy in the S unda y School , Bertha
next 30 days.
Parker, Emma Adams, Paul
Midwest Steel Corp ., Forbes, Mr. and Mrs. Walter
P omeroy; has con tributed Schreiber, Gilbert Zwllling,
$250 to the successful drive . otto }lartenbach Mr. and
other new contributors are Mrs. l'lerbert M~re, WilkesSoars Catalog Store, Mr. and _ ville United Methodist
Mrs . Harold Ebersba ch, Church Minersville United
Helen Lyons, Shade River Methodist Church Women;
Lodge 4!i3, Beulah Ewing, ilusy Bee Class of Middleport
Mr.. and .Mrs. Durward First Baptist Church, Mrs.
Cufnings, Mr . a nd Mrs . Roy Homer Carman, Mr. and
Smith, Mr, and Mrs. Gerald Mr s. Scott Folmer, Mrs.
Wildermuth, Mrs. Leona T. Freda Mltch Mr. and Mrs.
Smith , United Methodist Lloyd Moore: Mr. and Mrs.
Church, Myrtts Ka y Parker, Willard Hines, and the Ken
Mr . and Mrs. Dwtght Parker, Ams bary Chapter of the
Mrs. Rut h A. Barnitz, Mr. Izaak Wa lton Lea gue of
and Mrs. John Mttch , Mr. and America .
Mrs. Henry Wells, Norma
Residents wishing to help
and David Goodwiil , Mr. and put the , drive over the top
Mrs. Donald Yoho, Mr. and may send their contributions .
Mrs. Wtlbur Monroe, Mrs. to t he Pomeroy Emergency
Wilhelmina Roedel, Mr. and Squad, P. 0.' Box 247,
Pomeroy .

a

s·: -

_!)peration ·of Meigs welfare
. department is under review
Meeting in regular session
Tuesday night, the Meigs
Co unty Board of Commi ss ioners -di sc u ssed with
Mrs. Barbara Shuler, welfare
director, overall operating
procedures ~f her depart-

ment.
The commissioners also
reviewed at iength priohties
of placement of persons in job
slots under the CETA
program. A final decision on

selection of applicants wlU be

made soon.
It wa s reported that
painting of the courthouse
exterior and dome has been
completed by the Gheen
Painting Co. of Racine'. This
project was paid fQr com pletely with anti-recession
fWlds, a state program which
furnishes money to co unty
governments for repair or ·
upkeep of county buildings.

Volunteers on 39 missions
The Middleport Fire emergency calls 27 were ln
Department answered 39 town and eight were outside.
calls during the month or The depa rtment spent 136.2
September according to the manhours on t he emergency
monthly reP.rt of C. Robert runs and 15.4 hours on the flre -·
Fisher, chief.
ca lls. Total miles drlven by
'llte department answered the
department
on
three
fire
ca lls,
35 emergency ca lls only totaled
emergency-medical ca lls and - 685.8.
·one miscellaneous call. Of tile

"

•

·•

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